Every Day Is a Gift
A Memoir
by Tammy Duckworth
Twelve Books
Twelve
Biographies & Memoirs
Pub Date 30 Mar 2021
I am reviewing a copy of Everyday Is A Gift through Twelve Books and Netgalley:
As the biracial daughter of an American father and a Thai-Chinese mother, Duckworth faced discrimination, poverty, and the horrors of war, all before the age of sixteen. As a girl, she dodged bullets as her family fled war-torn Phnom Penh. She sold roses by the side of the road to save her family from hunger and homelessness in Hawaii as a teenager.
Duckworth joined the Army, becoming one of a handful of female helicopter pilots at the start of Operation Iraqi Freedom. She served eight months in Iraq before an insurgent RPG shot down her helicopter, an attack that took her legs—and nearly took her life. She spent thirteen months recovering at Walter Reed, learning to walk again on prosthetic legs and planning her return to the cockpit. But Duckworth found a new mission after meeting her state's senators, Barack Obama and Dick Durbin. After winning two terms as a U.S. Representative, she won election to the U.S. Senate in 2016. And she and her husband Bryan fulfilled another dream when she gave birth to two daughters, becoming the first sitting senator to give birth.
Duckworth takes her readers through the amazing—
and amazingly true stories from her remarkable life. In November of 2004, an Iraqi RPG blew through the cockpit of Tammy Duckworth's U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter. The explosion, which destroyed her legs and mangled her right arm, was a turning point in her life. But as Duckworth shows in Every Day Is a Gift, that moment was just one in a lifetime of extraordinary turns.
I give EveryDay is A Gift five out of five stars!
Happy Reading!
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