| About the Book
When Karen and Sharon Sanders were
abducted and brutally raped on a Louisiana May night in 1977, they
were only fourteen years old. The aftermath of the rape and trial
left festering scars that disabled these young women from leading
normal lives. It is testimony to the inner strength of the Sanders
twins and their close-knit family that they were able to overcome
this crippling incident in their lives and even offer their abductor
forgiveness when he faced his parole board twenty years later. The
Sanders twins forgave but they never forgot. They carried their
scars into adulthood, lugging fear and suspicion from what had been
their idyllic childhood into adulthood, a weighty burden of
innocence obliterated too soon, viciously and sadistically by a man
with a past full of felonies. Fast forward to 1997, when a film crew
visited Angola Prison in Louisiana to produce a documentary entitled
The Farm about life in the controversial prison. The Sanders’ rapist
then caught a piece of the spotlight. While the resulting sympathy
did not gain him his parole, it did initiate an outpouring of
sympathy – not for his victims – but, ironically, for the rapist
himself. Suddenly the event that Karen and Sharon had tried to
extinguish from their lives for many years became media wildfire.
Karen Sanders would have preferred to forget, to obliterate any
memories of the rape the same way her rapist had obliterated her
innocence so many years before. Instead, Karen wrote her and
Sharon’s story to share with the world. Raped: Beyond a Shadow of
a Doubt is that story. Raped: Beyond a Shadow of a Doubt
is not only a story about rape. It is about the many paths one has
to travel to find healing. It's about pain, anger, fear, hate, and
forgiveness. In the author’s own words, “My hope is that anyone who
reads Raped: Beyond a Shadow of Doubt will find the courage
and strength to fight. Whatever the battle.”
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