Almost There: Searching for Home in a Life on the Move
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Recipient of Publisher?s Weekly Starred Review!On the move . . . again? Wondering when you will ?arrive??Sometimes God leads people out of familiar territory so he can tell them who they are. That moment you depart, you experience reinvention, renewal, and freedom. You get a redo on the adjectives associated with your name. Almost There is for those on the move and those who feel restless right where they are. It?s for those who struggle with not belonging, with feeling unsettled, with believing that home is out of their reach, at least for the moment. And Almost There is for those who find themselves in a transient lifestyle they didn?t expect?say, moving across the country for a new job or the military or an opportunity to begin again.With imaginative storytelling and witty, relatable prose, Bekah DiFelice offers wisdom for those struggling to belong in a world where home is constantly shifting. When our hope of home is rooted in an unchangeable God, we are not uprooted, lost, or made homeless by change. We become found ones on the move. Review Starred review. Military spouse DiFelice writes eloquently about the many difficulties and benefits of moving one?s home from place to place. DiFelice, a former marathon runner, draws frequently on an attitude of endurance and ?pushing through the pain? to make the most of wherever she and her Marine husband are stationed. She shares how emotions can become more volatile at the most unexpected times and the ways her poignant memories of family, friends, and key life moments meld together with a sense of loneliness each time she reaches an unfamiliar city. DiFelice is particularly touching when she recalls the Sunday afternoon shopping excursions with her mother and sister that have become fewer and fewer due to how far apart they live. Instead of wallowing in her sorrow, DiFelice calls them every Sunday so she can join with them as they walk. For DiFelice, everyone who longs for a place to call home must make (and keep making) definitive, intentional decisions to create their own haven. This book will appeal broadly to those who have lived a wandering existence, and Christian readers in particular will appreciate DiFelice?s tangents on the lives of biblical characters, which round out this fascinating take on life?s unexpected twists and turns. Publishers Weekly Review Almost There reads like a long-awaited letter from a long-lost friend. It?s immersive, as the best kind of storytelling should be. It?s honest and warm, as the best kinds of friends are. DiFelice writes about home as it?s lived and lost and loved. An impressively crafted, inherently appealing, consistently engaging, and compelling read from first page to last. Jen Pollock Michel, author of Keeping Place?Are we there yet?? No, not until you pick up this book and start reading. I expected to skim through these pages, on the way to somewhere else. I had to stop. And laugh. And savor. And wonder. This is a trip I hope many take, because Bekah DiFelice brilliantly shows us where to finally hang our hats?and our hearts. Leslie Leyland Fields, Author of Crossing the WatersBekah DiFelice writes beautifully and profoundly about our longing for and journey toward a true sense of home. This book is for all who are yearning for a belonging deeper than this world can offer. When I read the middle sections of Almost There, I was at that time overwhelmed by a family crisis and was feeling desperate, orphaned, and lost. Bekah?s chapters on fear and on faith and doubt reached out to my brokenness . . . and I began to stumble back to my true home where my Abba was waiting with his secure love. Wherever you are in your pilgrimage, Almost There will meet you and embrace you, and it will provide intimate, heartfelt companionship for the rest of your journey. J. Kevin Butcher, Author of Choose and Choose AgainIf you?ve ever left something behind, you?ll find a friend in Bekah DiFelice as she invit
Recipient of Publisher?s Weekly Starred Review!On the move . . . again? Wondering when you will ?arrive??Sometimes God leads people out of familiar territory so he can tell them who they are. That moment you depart, you experience reinvention, renewal, and freedom. You get a redo on the adjectives associated with your name. Almost There is for those on the move and those who feel restless right where they are. It?s for those who struggle with not belonging, with feeling unsettled, with believing that home is out of their reach, at least for the moment. And Almost There is for those who find themselves in a transient lifestyle they didn?t expect?say, moving across the country for a new job or the military or an opportunity to begin again.With imaginative storytelling and witty, relatable prose, Bekah DiFelice offers wisdom for those struggling to belong in a world where home is constantly shifting. When our hope of home is rooted in an unchangeable God, we are not uprooted, lost, or made homeless by change. We become found ones on the move. Review Starred review. Military spouse DiFelice writes eloquently about the many difficulties and benefits of moving one?s home from place to place. DiFelice, a former marathon runner, draws frequently on an attitude of endurance and ?pushing through the pain? to make the most of wherever she and her Marine husband are stationed. She shares how emotions can become more volatile at the most unexpected times and the ways her poignant memories of family, friends, and key life moments meld together with a sense of loneliness each time she reaches an unfamiliar city. DiFelice is particularly touching when she recalls the Sunday afternoon shopping excursions with her mother and sister that have become fewer and fewer due to how far apart they live. Instead of wallowing in her sorrow, DiFelice calls them every Sunday so she can join with them as they walk. For DiFelice, everyone who longs for a place to call home must make (and keep making) definitive, intentional decisions to create their own haven. This book will appeal broadly to those who have lived a wandering existence, and Christian readers in particular will appreciate DiFelice?s tangents on the lives of biblical characters, which round out this fascinating take on life?s unexpected twists and turns. Publishers Weekly Review Almost There reads like a long-awaited letter from a long-lost friend. It?s immersive, as the best kind of storytelling should be. It?s honest and warm, as the best kinds of friends are. DiFelice writes about home as it?s lived and lost and loved. An impressively crafted, inherently appealing, consistently engaging, and compelling read from first page to last. Jen Pollock Michel, author of Keeping Place?Are we there yet?? No, not until you pick up this book and start reading. I expected to skim through these pages, on the way to somewhere else. I had to stop. And laugh. And savor. And wonder. This is a trip I hope many take, because Bekah DiFelice brilliantly shows us where to finally hang our hats?and our hearts. Leslie Leyland Fields, Author of Crossing the WatersBekah DiFelice writes beautifully and profoundly about our longing for and journey toward a true sense of home. This book is for all who are yearning for a belonging deeper than this world can offer. When I read the middle sections of Almost There, I was at that time overwhelmed by a family crisis and was feeling desperate, orphaned, and lost. Bekah?s chapters on fear and on faith and doubt reached out to my brokenness . . . and I began to stumble back to my true home where my Abba was waiting with his secure love. Wherever you are in your pilgrimage, Almost There will meet you and embrace you, and it will provide intimate, heartfelt companionship for the rest of your journey. J. Kevin Butcher, Author of Choose and Choose AgainIf you?ve ever left something behind, you?ll find a friend in Bekah DiFelice as she invit