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Georgia, A New York Story is a character-driven novel that takes
the reader on a stimulating, suspenseful, journey filled with
humor, sadness, friendship and affirmation. Its engaging stories
and quirky characters come together to form an arresting emotional
mosaic of survival. Georgia, a sixty-year-old professor of Musical
theatre and Drama therapy, heads a colorful but complicated
extended family in New York City during the latter half of 2001.
Her Chelsea home is a haven for her ever-growing eclectic family of
straight and gay friends, students, and neighbors who come and go
at will. Even-keeled, John, Georgia's younger husband, and Val,
their twenty-one year old aspiring videographer daughter, support
Georgia's need to create a safe space with rules and standards
where there is never an abandoned soul. The newest arrivals to this
loving household include: forty-year old Horace, a hapless poet
desperate to gain acceptance from his dysfunctional family and
achieve marriage with an unknown foreign girl he corresponds with
via the Internet; nephew Nick, the eight-year-old son of her
imperceptive brother and his deceitful, alcoholic wife; and Kasey,
an intelligent, kind-hearted, terrified teenage runaway, whose dark
secret threatens to destroy any chance for future happiness.
Musical theatre and New York historical references are sprinkled
throughout this first novel that covers a variety of themes in
serious, humorous and visual ways. The story and its characters are
psychologically complex and the author addresses the importance of
family systems, therapy and creative expression. Georgia, a New
York Story is the perfect choice for book clubs as the characters
are multi-generational. Topics for discussion are unlimited and may
include: surviving emotional and physical abuse; co dependency;
relationships; enabling; coming out; confronting your attacker, and
surviving life with humor and love. REVIEWS "Not since Armistead
Maupin has a novelist written so poignantly about the importance of
a person's logical family and the challenges of one's bio-logical
family. As an Expressive Arts Therapist and former Drama therapy
Teacher, it is refreshing to see a Drama Therapist as a three
dimensional main character in a book that is psychologically
complex and addresses the importance of family systems, therapy,
and creative expression. In Carol Lucha-Burns' moving first novel,
Georgia, A New York Story, we are invited into the lives of an
eclectic multigenerational group of people all looking to find
their way in post 9-11 New York City." - Dr. Deah Schwartz,
Co-author of Leftovers: An Expressive Arts Therapy Resource for
Eating Disorders and Body Image and author of the syndicated blog,
Dr. Deah's Tasty Morsels. You can visit her at http:
//www.drdeah.com. "I loved the character of Georgia, in Georgia, A
New York Story. She is a fun, adventurous, witty, wise and feisty
role model for people of all ages. This lady should have her own
talk show. We could learn much from her." - Sharon Stevens, Author
of Bitch Lifestyle the Manual. http: //www.BitchLifestyle.com.
"Georgia, a New York Story reads (aloud) very well and takes you
right in. The character driven plotting has good suspense and keeps
us wanting to find out what happens to the characters in their
fixes, like in Dick Francis stories." - Scott Buxton, Actor, Audio
Books.
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