MEDIA ADVISORY:
Award-winning journalist and new author, Julia Torres Barden has released her first novel – a mostly true memoir of her trauma to triumph story as a Puerto Rican from New York City. Her poignant portrayal as a victim of childhood rape and a forced adoption – which stripped her of her Spanish surname – also reveals how she recovered from her painful assimilation experience, 9/11 and her formal Post Traumatic Stress Disorder medical diagnosis.
In an effort to educate and support fellow victims and those who love them, Torres Barden has written a raw and provocative novel – believing that true recovery can only come when brutal honesty is embraced and shared. Her book also chronicles her determination as a dedicated political advocate for Puerto Rico, where she is currently leading a petition effort demanding that the U.S. Congress debate a 28th Amendment granting equal voting rights to fellow Americans living on the island.
Intentionally coordinated to be released during Hispanic Heritage Month, Torres Barden has chosen to host her book release event at La Casa Azul Bookstore in Spanish Harlem to further emphasize her support for her Hispanic community.
As a member of the nation’s speakers bureau for R.A.I.N.N. (Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network), the author has collaborated with the organization to support this event. Her petition will also be available for review and signatures. The media, literary agents, trauma survivors and their advocates, as well as the general community, have all been invited to attend.
What: “NEWYORICANGIRL…Surviving my Spanglish Life” Book Release
When: Saturday, September 14th 2013 – 6-8pm
Where: La Casa Azul Bookstore – 143 E. 103rd Street, NYC 10029 – (212) 426-2626
Contact: Julia Torres Barden at Website: NEWYORICANGIRL.COM, Email: newyoricangirl1@gmail.com, Twitter: @newyoricangirl
BOOK DESCRIPTION: A Spanglish girl’s gritty tale of trauma and triumph while pursuing the American dream. NEWYORICANGIRL must navigate a traumatic childhood that includes rape, her father’s abandonment and her mother’s shameful life as the mistress of a powerful CEO while also dealing with her family’s poverty and violence in the South Bronx of the 1960s. After she is moved to Manhattan, her Puerto Rican spirit is torn apart by the Jewish stepfather who forcibly adopts her at the request of her Puerto Rican mother. In spite of her blistering assimilation scars, she becomes the first college graduate in her family and tries hard to overcome the wounds of her upbringing.
Just when she believes she is putting her painful assimilated past behind her, she finds herself in New York City on September 11th 2001, when she had planned to celebrate her success in Corporate America. As the symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder present themselves, NEWYORICANGIRL finds herself in the fight of her life when her mental health crisis unfolds and she is unable to distinguish the trauma of past events with the safety of her present day experience.