Saturday, March 26, 2011
Steve Watkins' new book "What Comes After" a powerful local story of child abuse. He will do a reading from the book and sign copies at GCC March 29
Steve Watkins, author of "What Comes After," brings his new book to GCC's Frederickburg Campus at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, March 29.
Award-winning journalist and author Steve Watkins will do a reading from his new book, "What Comes After," and sign copies of the new work at 7 p.m., Tuesday, March 29 at Sealy Auditorium at Germanna Community College's Fredericksburg Campus in Spotsylvania off U.S. 17 near Cosner's Corner.
The event is free and open to the public. He'll also sign copies of the paperback version of his award-winning book 'Down Sand Mountain."
"What Comes After" will be available at Germanna before it goes on sale on the Internet and in stores on April 12.
Watkins, an English professor at the University of Mary Washington, explains that "What Comes After" is based on a local incident:
“In a way, the story of Iris Wight in 'What Comes After' started several years ago when I was sitting in a juvenile and domestic relations court during an emergency removal hearing, reading an autopsy report on a little 5-year-old boy who had been beaten to death. His name was Donny. He had more than 40 pronounced contusions, two broken ribs, a broken collar bone, and a skull fracture — all in various stages of healing, indicating that he had sustained the injuries over an extended period of time. In the autopsy photos he appeared emaciated, as if he’d been starved. He also had two severe traumas to his abdomen caused by what the medical examiner said were powerful external blows. The second, and most recent, was the one that killed him.
“None of us who worked on that case, which lasted two long years and led to terrible revelations about even more physical and sexual abuse of Donny and his siblings, have ever been the same. It was my job as a Court Appointed Special Advocate to investigate Donny’s story, and the stories of his brothers and sisters, and to write a narrative that would bring those children to life for the judge presiding over the case — and, in a way, to bring Donny back to life, if only in my report, and if only for a little while, and if only for the court. None of us doubted that the surviving children would be scarred forever by what happened to them, but thanks to the love and dedication of a lot of people involved in the case —therapists, attorneys, social workers, foster parents, teachers — Donny’s brothers and sisters ended up with families who loved them and promised to take care of them. They had a chance — at least a chance — to recover, and grow up safe, and live meaningful lives.
“When I read an article two years ago in our local newspaper about a girl who had been badly beaten by her cousin, on orders from her guardian aunt, I was struck by how few details there were about the girl — though that is usual in the case of underage victims, who are rarely identified to the public by police or prosecutors. The article didn’t say what her life had been like before she was beaten, or what happened to her after, except for this one sentence: ‘The girl is now in foster care.’ The more I thought about that girl and what happened to her, though, the more I felt drawn to tell her story, too — as I imagined it — for a wider audience than the court. I knew she wasn’t just another foster care kid, and she wasn’t just another victim. She must have had a life, and a story worth telling. All children do.”
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