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Angels of a Lower Flight: One Womans Mission to Save a Country . . . One Child at a Time

Angels of a Lower Flight: One Womans Mission to Save a Country . . . One Child at a Time

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Author: Susan Scott Krabacher
Publisher: Touchstone
Category: Book

List Price: $24.95
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Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 14 reviews
Sales Rank: 274431

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1st Touchstone Hardcover Ed
Pages: 336
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 8.6 x 5.5 x 1.3

ISBN: 1416535144
Dewey Decimal Number: 362.7092
EAN: 9781416535140
ASIN: 1416535144

Publication Date: October 9, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Condition: Slight tears and scratches on the cover; Slightly bent pages; Some dirt; the rest in good shape!

Also Available In:

   Kindle Edition - Angels of a Lower Flight: One Woman's Mission to Save a Country . . . One Child at a Time
   Paperback - Angels of a Lower Flight: One Woman's Mission to Save a Country . . . One Child at a Time

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

"In this world, you were loved."

The inspiring story of how one woman's message of hope and opportunity will change the lives of an entire generation.

Three schools, two orphanages, a hospital, and an abandoned-infant home -- constructed in the poorest country in the western hemisphere -- were the result of one quick television commercial. The ad was for a charity, asking for donations to help impoverished children in a third world country. Though author Susie Scott Krabacher had a little money to give, what she wanted was to hold the hand of every child she saw and tell them that they were not forgotten and that they too were important. When Susie called the charity, it wanted only monetary donations -- and every other overseas nonprofit she contacted couldn't or wouldn't take on an inexperienced volunteer. So Susie set out to change the children's lives on her own.

In this heartbreaking and inspiring memoir, Susie Scott Krabacher tells how the pain in her past caused her to doubt if God really loved and protected her. From her abusive childhood to her experiences as a Playboy centerfold during the 1980s, Susie details with frank honesty how she lost her faith along the way and how her experiences helping children in Haiti, an impoverished nation only five hundred miles from Florida, brought God back into her life.

In a country where 10 percent of all children die before the age of four, Susie mounted a brave effort to provide not just charity but opportunity. By treating the children she helps as individuals, Susie gives them the tools to save their own country. Although some of the children she's tirelessly worked to rescue do not survive, Susie will never again lose her faith.


Customer Reviews:   Read 9 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Incredibly touching   January 2, 2008
H. Grove (Maryland, USA)
8 out of 9 found this review helpful

Susie grew up in hillbilly-land in an abusive family, and aged much faster than she should have had to. When she was offered a chance to become a Playboy Playmate, she jumped at it---the money and perks gave her a chance to escape her life. Unfortunately they led her to another tragic life of drugs and abusive men.

Finally she got out. She took on little jobs to pay her way and get a divorce from her con-man husband, and she ended up marrying the lawyer who helped her. One day she took a trip to Haiti to see if she could help the poor people there, and her life changed forever.

Mrs. Krabacher unflinchingly shows us all sides of herself, including the selfish, the foolish, and the hopelessly naive. And oh, how naive she was, at so many points. Yet that same naivete allowed her keep trying in the face of seemingly insurmountable obstacles, and although the situation is a continual struggle---there is no finish line to announce "she succeeded!"---her organization now cares for more than 3,000 children in Haiti.

Make no mistake---this is an incredibly hard book to read, and the images it leaves in your mind will haunt you after you're done reading it. The living conditions and depth of corruption in Haiti are so deplorable it's almost impossible to imagine. The level of religious conviction Mrs. Krabacher displays might also be uncomfortable for non-religious readers; at one point I put the book down for a bit after she argued that voodoo was behind many of the evils in that country. I'd argue that it's the people who misuse a religion in order to gain power who are at fault.

That aside, however, I can see that it would take deep conviction and yes, even unflagging naivete, in order to experience the setbacks she has and keep going. It's amazing to read about her work, and the bright spots of hope and happiness within it.



5 out of 5 stars Inspiring, hopeful, powerful, excellent   November 22, 2007
Michael W. Albin
7 out of 7 found this review helpful

I must commend Ms. Krabacher and the editorial team at Touchstone for producing such an excellent product. My daughter and son-in-law have travelled to Haiti several times and reported that the conditions there are simply horrible. Thank you to Ms. Krabacher's organization, the Mercy & Sharing Foundation, for the humanitarian work you are doing there.

As to the book itself, "Angels of a Lower Flight" chronicles the journey of a person who eventually finds her life's purpose through helping others. Susie Krabacher was born with many strikes against her, prediminately a chaotic family situation and a sexually-abusive grandfather. She seeks security and significance through external affirmation, eventually rising to a model, actress, and Playboy playmate and centerfold. She discovers that all the glamor and excess leaves her wounded, searching, and emotionally stranded. Through a strange twist of fate, she decides to travel to Haiti with a friend. Upon arrival, she immediately gets to work and forms a feeding clinic. The work in Haiti eventually becomes her life's work, and she forms the Mercy & Sharing Foundation, which has grown today to include orphanges, schools, and medical clinics.

Ms. Krabacher's story is a satisfying and an extremely quick read. It leaves you thinking and wondering about life's mysteries much longer. A single chapter, chapter 19--titled "One Child"--is worth the price of the book alone. In this chapter, Ms. Krabacher poignantly describes the plight of just one of her orphans, a young boy with a heart condition named Ashley. She tells the story straightforwardly, not exploitingly or carelessly. I won't tell you how it endds, but I will say that Ashley's story reaches straight to the heart. There are so many needy children around the world, and sometimes we can get lost in the sheer numbers. But this chapter puts it all in context--each person is important and valued. This seems to be Ms. Krabacher's overall message in life.

I highly recommend this book.







5 out of 5 stars Heartbreaking, haunting, beautiful story of an angel on earth...   January 29, 2008
billstjohn (us virgin islands)
6 out of 6 found this review helpful

Although the words of this story may make for an easy read, the thoughts that those words provoke, and the places they take your mind are anything but. I constantly found myself literally having to put this book down in order for my brain to process the haunting events in Susie Scott Krabachers' story.

In many ways "Angels of a Lower Flight" is like two books in one, the first details Susie's turbulent childhood and then her fast living Playmate days where every physical manifestation of success was hers for the taking. The second, which takes place after she marries her husband Joe, is a no holds barred descent into hellish conditions of Haiti and her efforts to rescue the broken and abandoned children there.

The journey of her life in Haiti that Susie carries the reader through is truly the stuff of nightmares. She is unflinching in describing failure, both hers and that of the country around her. And yet even in the book's darkest parts, such as when she is forced to pay bribes at the morgue to recover the worm ridden bodies of the children she tried to rescue - or the simple burials in Styrofoam crates of little shattered bodies with the touching message, "In this world you were loved," one can't help but feel in a strange way simultaneously uplifted. That for these tiny discarded souls, to be loved so much during their short time on earth is beyond what we have words to say.

But "Angels of Lower Flight" is filled victories too. Thousands upon thousands of children have been helped by Mercy and Sharing, the organization Susie founded in Haiti to feed, shelter and educate them. The sometimes clever, sometimes miraculous ways that she and her team have found to circumnavigate the volatile, dangerous and unpredictable nature of Haiti makes for an electrifying, thrilling story.

However in the end what I found so powerful, so inspiring about this book, was the way that Susie points a way for all of us to make a difference in this world. Because of her raw honesty you can see that even that even though her actions are heroic, even angelic at times, through it all she remains deeply human, up against the same challenges and limitations shared by us all. And yet by using her footsteps as a guide, all of us are capable of being heroes, and perhaps even angels, on this Earth.



5 out of 5 stars the story of a stormy childhood and a country like hell   February 8, 2008
L. Ramshaw
5 out of 5 found this review helpful

This book chronicles the life of a beautiful woman, who suffered abuse and was used for her looks. When she did find peace in her life it was not enough. She picked the worst place that she knew of (Haiti) to help children who are not wanted. Often these children are left for dead because of the parents'ties to voodoo. It is a story that most of the world never hears or would believe. The book is hard to put down and the fact that it is true makes it even harder to comprehend.


5 out of 5 stars Heartbreaking/Heartwarming -- A Must Read   November 7, 2007
Avid NY Reader
4 out of 4 found this review helpful

Susie Scott Krabacher is a hero. Putting her abusive and sometimes out-of-control past behind her, she created the Mercy & Sharing Foundation in order to help the children of Haiti. Her book is a must read, but be sure to have a box of tissues handy. And, if you are as touched as I was, you will then go to your computer, find her site, and will donate money to help her continue her mission. God bless you Susie!



charity  haiti  inspirational  memoir  motivational  

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