The Silent Scream
by
Book Details
About the Book
THE SILENT SCREAM
As an early teenager, Sharon moved with her family to a part of the country not far from where she had grown up, but culturally, it was a million miles away. She endured the hardships of not being accepted in school or in the community and then one day she realized that she was a stranger in her own family. Sharon tried to reason whether her parents had always been that way or if they had been coerced into accepting a strange way of life. They had become treasonous enemies against her very soul. Eventually she was forced to change, or become, a good actor in order to survive to adulthood. She “felt confused not knowing what to do or where to go, she was only sixteen…”
Thinking she would endure a loveless marriage and build a normal life for herself, she made mistakes. She had no intention of letting the children she bore become a product of that destructive environment - she would flee one way or another. Later in life, thousands of miles away, she encountered even greater challenges than she had experienced in the place from which she had escaped
Relative power governed the world of her teens. A turn to politics showed her another world of falsehoods. Greed, money, and the search for truth ruled her life as an adult. There was no winning; no life of normalcy - until the truth finally set her free. Like following a true compass, she found her refuge and learned that success is a journey not a destination.
About the Author
Sandra Jones is mature and experienced in life. She writes from her life's experiences and her first- hand knowledge of the experiences of others. Ms. Jones feels that her writing about such issues might bring some comfort to those who can identify with those experiences, knowing they are not alone in their memories nor their sufferings. Her experiences stem from having lived within various cultures of mainland America, having the KKK at the heart of her own family. She was taught to love, but her exemplar showed hate. She was taught to have compassion, while being shown ridicule and indifference. She was taught to be honest, yet her every encounter with friendship and family betrayed her. She then embraced island life in both the one million population metropolitan area of Oahu and the rural areas of the outer islands. She submerged herself into several of the thirty various cultures that control the islands and emerged from the grips of the various syndicates who would attempt to control her life. Though they did take her freedom for a while, they never broke her spirit and she returned to her beloved Hawaii to begin again and to write many stories about her life and those whose lives she touched. She is thankful for all that she has gained in life, continuing her love of people and refusing to be conquered by evil that is intended to take one to a new low.