Monday, June 13, 2016

Leaving Shangrila: The True Story of a Girl, Her Transformation and Her Eventual Escape by Isabelle Gecils Interview, Excerpt & Giveaway


Leaving Shangrila: The True Story of a Girl, Her Transformation and Her Eventual Escape
by Isabelle Gecils

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GENRE:  Memoir

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BLURB:

Leaving Shangrila: The True Story of A Girl, Her Transformation and Her Eventual Escape by Isabelle Gecils, is the captivating memoir of a charmingly complex heroine. 

Isabelle paints a colorful world as she tells the tale of how she forged her own path in the midst of turmoil. The story, set in Brazil where she grew up, is populated with fascinating characters, both good and bad. From a narcissistic mother to her perpetually flawed lovers to three resilient sisters, Leaving Shangrila’s motley crew make for an endlessly intriguing storyline.

Leaving Shangrila begins with young Isabelle, trapped in a hellish world. Surrounded by lies, manipulation, and abuse, Isabelle is desperate to escape the adversity of this place. Filled with tremendous strength and an unyielding drive to survive, she begins her journey toward freedom and self-realization. Through the trials and obstacles along the way, Isabelle goes back and forth to balance who she is with what she must do to survive.

With themes of perseverance, self-reliance, and the resilience of the human spirit, Leaving Shangrila: The True Story Of A Girl, Her Transformation and Her Eventual Escape highlights the important character traits one discovers on the path to finding their self. Truly empowering and inspirational, readers everywhere will relate to this coming of age story.

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Excerpt One:

My entire class staged a school play, except that, unlike everybody else, I watched it rather than act in it. Joining the theater troop required almost daily rehearsals at one of my classmates’ lavish colonial homes near school. I was not invited to join the group. They already knew I would not come.

At the school grounds, my classmates cracked jokes about what happened during their afternoons together. They perched on one another as they traded stories and exchanged hugs. I heard about the English classes they took after school, their boat trips around the bays of Rio de Janeiro, the excited chatter that accompanied field trips I was never allowed to join. When the entire class decided to spend a lightly chaperoned weekend in Cabo Frio, a town with white, sandy beaches and coconut trees lining the boardwalks, my jealousy meter spiked. For two months, that is all anyone talked about. Since I did not even receive an invitation, nobody spoke with me.

I felt lonely observing them. I longed to be as adored as were the two most popular girls in my class: Isabela and Flavia. Isabela, despite the discolored white spots all over her skin due to type 1 diabetes, was the reigning queen. The boys swooned over Flavia, two years older than the rest of us although she repeated third and fifth grade due to her poor academic performance.

I observed these two girls, searching for what it was about them that made them special. Yes, they were both beautiful. While their beauty may have helped with their popularity, it surely was not the main factor, as there were other pretty girls too. I decided that what they had in common, what nobody else had, was that they were the best athletes in my class, even perhaps the best in all of the school.

Isabela and Flavia were always the ones everybody wanted to have on their team and as their friend. They were either team captain or the first pick. They seemed to try harder than everybody else. So I thought that if I truly focused on sports, then I could be just like them. If only I could excel on the handball field—as girls did not play soccer, despite the madness surrounding the most popular sport in Brazil—then maybe, just maybe, my social standing could change too. I made a plan. One day, I would be just as great as these two. One day, I would be chosen first.


  
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AUTHOR Bio and Links:

Isabelle Gecils grew up in Shangrila, a remote farm in a lush jungle in Brazil. But who really knows where she hails from? Her immediate family hailed from 6 different countries: France (dad), Egypt (mom and grandma), Turkey (grandpa), Lithuania (grandpa) and Poland (grandma).  There is a freedom in belonging nowhere and everywhere at the same time.
Leaving Shangrila is the story of Isabelle’s journey from a life others choose for her to one she created for herself. To support the writing of this memoir, Isabelle completed the Stanford Creative Nonfiction Writing certificate program. She currently lives in Saratoga, California, with her husband, four sons and two territorial cats.

LINKS:
@IsabelleGecils


Interview:
Where are you from?
I was born in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. But it is hard to know where I am really from.  We great up believing that our family was French was my father was born in and my mother grew up in France.  But my mother was actually born in Egypt as was my grandmother, and my grandfather in Turkey.  My paternal grandparents were born in Poland and Lithuania.  I speak three languages (English, French and Portuguese) but since I have an accent in every language I speak, people are constantly asking me where I am from.  When I say that I am now American, they all then ask “but where are you really from?”  It is a hard question to answer.


Tell us your latest news?
The most recent news is the publication of m memoir, Leaving Shangrila: The True Story of a Girl, Her Transformation and Her Eventual Escape in May. There has been a lot of activity surrounding this moment in my life.  Until then, writing and preparing Leaving Shangrila for publishing was restrict to a large, but limited number of the amazing team that helped me make it happen – my writing group, publisher, beta readers, cover designers, and those who helped me with marketing ideas. Now, it is about connecting with readers and it has been such an amazing experience.  I feel so honored when someone chooses to read Leaving Shangrila and I have been very humbled by all the positive feedback.


When did you first consider yourself a writer?
In my career as a consultant focused on the energy industry, I had a built an entire business focused on numbers and economic and business models.  I can make spreadsheets sing! Writing? I had written various technical papers with the findings of my analysis, but that would not translate well into a book.  So I applied to the Stanford Creative Nonfiction Certificate program, with the purpose of obtaining guidance on how to write a book I am proud of. Writing was an evolution.  Because I kept my day job, whenever people asked me what I did for a living, I would respond “I am a consultant, but I am also writing a book.”  I believe it was when I finished Leaving Shangrila’s 4th draft (there were 7 full drafts), the one I shared with my book advisor at Stanford, I first referred to myself as a “writer.”  I had a book I felt then and thus had earned this title. And that felt great. 


When and why did you begin writing? And what inspired you to write your first book?
When I moved to the United States as teenager, I left my previous life behind.From that moment on, I became a new person.  I did not think about my past, did not talk about it, and did not think that I would ever feel compelled to.
But in 2004, my son was born. By then, I had surrounded myself with friends and love, when earlier in my life I felt mostly alone and abandoned. I found myself relatively successful professionally, using the financial security that it provided to mask that I grew up without means, often wearing tattered, stained clothing. My travels around the world hid the fact that I had not been anywhere beyond the walls of a round house in the middle of a jungle in Brazil and its nearby town of Petropolis, until I first set foot in America. Most importantly, I was the owner of my destiny, free to make choices that would keep both me, and now my newborn son, safe. A privilege that eluded me throughout my childhood. It was hovering over my son’s crib that I felt the need to tell my story. I felt the calling to share with my son the story of the immense struggle to free myself from the circumstances where fate had placed me, that enable me to offer him a life free - to the extent that I could provide it - of fear, of lies and of loneliness.
What would you like my readers to know?

Thank you for having me as a guest on the site today.  Leaving Shangrila is a story of triumph over adversity and personal transformation.  While it details what I did to overcome the circumstances of my childhood, it also touches on the why the isolation, abuse and neglect when unnoticed and uncommented upon.  I feel that many people stand by and choose to look the other way when they are faced with uncomfortable situations because “it is none of their business” to engage with other people’s issues.  I wonder if adults in my life spoke up, asked questions, whether that situation would have ended sooner, or whether I would have needed to rely on my self-determination to get myself out of Shangrila.  My hope is that those who face adversity, see from the book that they have all within themselves more power and strength than they realize.  And for those who see, or even suspect something, speak up! Ask the question, point it out.  You may just save someone a lot of grief and hardship.
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GIVEAWAY 

Isabelle Gecils will be awarding a $30 Amazon or Barnes and Noble GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour.


19 comments:

  1. thank you for the chance to win :)

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    1. You are welcome Lisa. I hope you are enjoying the tour, the excerpt and the interview. I feel vey honored to be a guest in the blog today.

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  2. Hello and I am back saying thank you once again for the opportunity you have given us to win this giveaway

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    1. Hello again James, and you are welcome. I have been enjoying the tour immensely and the opportunity to connect with everyone.

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  3. thanks for the opportunity to win.

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    1. You are welcome Sara. Thank you for stopping by during the tour. It is an honor for me to be a guest and to be able to connect with all of you.

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  4. Great post, I enjoyed reading it. Thanks for sharing :)

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    1. Thank you so much Victoria. I am so glad that you enjoyed the post and thank you for your comment.

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  5. You have a amazing back story, and are a very strong person. I look forward to the book, thank you for the giveaway

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    1. Thank you so much Cyndi. I hope you will love reading Leaving Shangrila. I had to become strong to overcome all the early adversity in my life. It was the only way I found for myself to change the circumstances of my life. I believed it stayed with me ever since... the feeling that I can overcome anything really, even though it is not easy sometimes.

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    1. Thank you so much Rita. The excerpt is the prologue to Leaving Shangrila and it marks a turning point in my life, when I first achieved a dream that I longed for. I refer to that moment often, whenever I am faced with a crossroad or an initial obstacle to obtaining a goal.

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  7. This really sounds like a great story.

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    1. Thank you so much. I do hope that those who read Leaving Shangrila will feel inspired by it, and to find strength within themselves to deal with the curveballs that life inevitably throws at us.

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  8. Sounds like a great read, thank you for the interesting interview!

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    1. Thank you so much Dario. I have enjoyed answering the interview questions and feel honored truly to have this opportunity to talk about Leaving Shangrila, the process of writing it and connecting with all o fyou

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  9. Who are some of your favorite authors; what strikes you about their work?

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