--TERROR TURNED
INSIDE OUT
“Terror has a sound.”
It’s taken Karen Stefano years of
overcoming self-doubt to be able write these words, and it’s with chilling
candor such as this that she willfully and artfully splays herself wide open on
the page.
In her riveting new book, What A Body Remembers: A Memoir of Sexual
Assault and Its Aftermath, Stefano recounts a horrifying night from her
past that would go on to haunt and torment her well into adulthood.
As a nineteen-year-old Sophomore at
UC Berkley, Stefano (then Thomas) takes a job as a make-shift campus cop whose
main responsibility is keeping other students safe. That irony is turned on its head when, on an
off night, out of uniform and dressed in casual attire, Stefano is attacked at
knifepoint.
What ensues is a life-altering
journey in more ways than one. Packed
with twist after twist after twist, the book at times becomes something of a
page-turner, one knocking hard on the door that says truth is stranger than
fiction. Other times, the book is
introspective, yet always without becoming self-aggrandizing.
Through the span of several
decades, Stefano’s attacker is set free, Stefano’s mother slowly slides into
dementia all the while Stefano’s marriage implodes during, but not because of,
the financial demise of the Great Recession.
If that weren’t enough intrigue,
Stefano goes on to become a Public Defender for the state of California,
advocating on behalf of many clients who are just as heinous as her attacker,
and some who are, unbelievably, even worse.
Told with a rapid-fire eye for
detail, Stefano gives us a nuanced look at confronting terror face-to-face
while also coming to terms with the residual effects of terror’s insidious hold
on a damaged psyche.
Throughout the book, Stefano
grapples with internal conflict while questions--either direct or
indirect--repeatedly rear their head. Will I ever stop being afraid? When is it okay to feel safe? Can I be brave again? Does this have to define me? How can I prevent an experience like this
from happening to someone else?
If the book reads like true crime,
that’s because it is. Savvy and bold,
Stefano shows us her scars and those of a flawed judicial system that could well
have thwarted a dangerous predator in the early stages of his development.
While Stefano’s story is hers
alone, the book’s themes of struggle and subsequent redemption are universally
appealing. Here’s a life jarred by
crisis and a heroine who, through it all, will not stop fighting, and will not
be silent.
As Stefano unsheathes the
accounting of her traumatizing experiences, one feels like a voyeur watching
her battle both real and metaphorical demons.
We get a front row seat. We get
all the angst and grit and triumph. We
get everything but the popcorn, though you might be wise to bring some along while
digging into this gripping read.
You can find it here: https://www.amazon.com/What-Body-Remembers-Assault-Aftermath/dp/1947856952/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=karen+stefano&qid=1563591389&s=books&sr=1-1
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