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Falling Back to Earth: A Novel

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What would you do if you woke up one day and realized you were someone else?

This is exactly what happens to Eve Spencer. Memories, like shards of glass, cut through her mind and begin to dismantle everything she knows to be real. As she fights to find out who she really is, her discovery threatens everything and everyone around her, including her family. With the help of a cantankerous attorney, she races to reveal who she is before it's too late. But as she excavates her memories, everyone around her believes she's losing her mind, and her grip on reality starts to slip from her while she digs for the truth.

Falling Back to Earth takes the reader on a journey of self-discovery, madness, and challenges what we know and believe to be truth versus perception. Only when the truth is revealed can Eve finally find peace.

284 pages, Kindle Edition

First published September 28, 2010

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391 people want to read

About the author

J.A. Carter-Winward

19 books118 followers
J.A. Carter-Winward is an award-winning writer, poet, and visual artist living in the mountains of northern Utah and the author of five poetry books, six novels, two short-story collections, and a stage play.

Her most recent publications include Work in Progress: Dialogues & Poems, and If it Stings...that means it's working - a poetry story, available Limited Edition print hardback and Kindle.

Her latest novel, Wade, won Best Literary Fiction novel of 2021 in that category by IndieReader's Discovery Awards.

She's also co-founded a non-profit organization to help raise awareness for the often-overlooked dangers of over 800+ FDA-approved medications on the market today.

blackboxwarn.org

J.A.'s work can be found in various print and online journals, anthologies, and publications.
Check her official Author Page for upcoming releases coming in 2022.

www.jacarterwinward.com

https://www.facebook.com/jacarterwinw...

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Annika Haehle.
2 reviews1 follower
March 8, 2018
**Caution: spoilers ahead**
When I first finished reading Falling back to Earth, I felt denied a satisfying ending with Lilli. Here I’d spent all this time becoming invested and liking her as a character—I wanted HER to succeed and have the happy ending. I connected with her story, her personality, her pain, not Eve.

After ruminating on it for a bit, I realized what JA has done is brilliant. She was able to make her readers (at least I did) believe in Lilli, who is clearly haunted by mental illness we discover at the ending, and see things from her perspective. Even though Lilli/Eve seemed to have some sort of condition she was dealing with for most of the book, I bought into her reality.

With the Lilli/Eve character, JA has helped us to come as close as we can to experiencing what it’s like to be mentally ill; to believe the sky is red when everyone else believes it’s blue; to have everyone treat you like you’re crazy when you believe you are not.

What made it even more interesting were the metaphors peppered throughout the book, the Eve/Eden allegory, and of course the mystery of her identity that hooked me into the story and kept me guessing.

Ultimately, it was an education for me in what it’s like to have a mental illness. Well done.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Nneka.
2 reviews
January 17, 2018
*I recieved a copy of this book via a Goodreads giveaway*

I loved the handwritten note and wax seal stamp from the author in the front of my copy, thank you!

The opening was gripping, and immediately had me interested in the story - both an investment in Eve and the Child.

The novel was truly a mystery, constantly leading me to mistrust new characters and kept me inclined to figure out the truth.
At times it felt repetitive, but the thrill and suspense kept me going.

It tackles issues of mental health and grief, which were intriguing but at times explained poorly.
Profile Image for Steph.
128 reviews15 followers
January 26, 2018
*I recieved a copy of this book via a Goodreads giveaway*
I loved the handwritten note and wax seal stamp from the author in the front of my copy. And I want to give an honest review to say thankyou.

The novel opens with the line "I remember the first time I lost my mind" and I was intrigued. I'm very interested in mental health so I thought this would be an interesting one. The main character, Eve (or "Lilli"), comes out of a shopping centre and, upon seeing a child alone crying in a locked car, calls the police... except it's her child.

Things get messy. Eve doesn't know who she is, or who her two children and husband Ben are. She remembers that she is "Lilli". But who is that? Child protection services and the media get involved. She doesn't feel like she can trust those closest to her, and the professionals she deals with are each rather flawed. I was left guessing who she could trust (and who I could trust as the reader).

This book frustrated me. It seemed repetitious, and often confusing. (I thought it was going to morph into a romance at one point.) But I wanted to know: has she "lost her mind", or is she really Lilli? The plot and building suspense drove me on.
Not sure that it's my kind of read, and I don't think it dealt with the issues of identity, mental health or grief elegantly. The premise had potential, but it didn't quite deliver.
Profile Image for Allison.
23 reviews3 followers
February 24, 2013
Great book !fun read ! If you like Jodi Picoult books you will like this book !
Profile Image for Yaaresse.
2,157 reviews16 followers
abandoned-dnf
November 1, 2017
Well, that was...something.
Even if I wanted to put up through first person and present tense--which is never likely--this story simply isn't going anywhere worth following. There's some nice turns of phrase here and there, but 12% into it, I find myself bored and not even curious about what's going on.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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