taking the words of Jesus seriously

is the author of The Invisible Girls,  a new memoir from . I was fortunate to get a few minutes to ask her a few questions about her touching, funny, compelling new piece of work.

Q:  Your book is about Somali Refugees and also about your survival of breast cancer.  How do you write one book about both things?

A:  When I met the Somali mom and her girls on the MAX the first time, we had a lot of differences – different religions, ethnicities, skin color, and language.  But as I developed a relationship with them, I realized that we had a lot in common at the core.  Because I’d been a little girl growing up in a fundamentalist culture, where men buried you under yards of fabric and lists of rules and taught you that women were supposed to be silent.  And I knew what it was like to be a refugee of sorts, because after I nearly died of cancer in my 20’s, I sold everything I had and got on a plane with a suitcase of clothes and flew from the east coast to Portland, OR and started over.  And so even though the narrative lines of the Somali refugee family and my cancer experiences seem disparate, they actually weave together well, because all this time, I’d been an Invisible Girl, too.

Q:  You have a good deal of humor in your book.  How do you keep a sense of humor about such serious subject matter?

A:  My sense of humor developed while I was going through treatments for cancer.  The seven months I was enduring surgeries and chemo and radiation were grueling, I was sure I wasn’t going to make it.  I went through all the emotions you can imagine – I got angry, I cried, I got frustrated – but none of those things made me feel better.  And then one day I thought, The only tactic I haven’t tried yet is humor.  I picked up great essay collections by David Sedaris and Augustin Burroughs, and laughing at their stories was an incredibly helpful emotional release.  Laughing in the midst of suffering kept me sane because it gave me a respite from all the pain I was in.

Q:  What has the response been from the public so far to your book?

A:  It’s been amazing.  A few weeks ago I was speaking at an event in Orlando with another author whose book was recently nominated for a Pulitzer.  We each spoke for 20 minutes and then did a book signing.  There were a handful of people in line to get his book, but the line for The Invisible Girls wrapped around the walls of this huge hotel ballroom.  That kind of response has happened a few times now.  It’s not like people are standing in line to meet me – nobody even knows who I am – but I think when they hear the story, they hear grace.  And when they’re standing in line for an hour, they’re signing up to learn more about that grace and hopefully have it infuse their life, too.

Q:  What do you hope people take away from reading your story?

A:  I hope that when people close the book, they don’t think,  Gee, good for her.  Or,  That was a crazy thing that happened to those Invisible Girls.  I hope readers realize that there are marginalized, invisible people in all of our lives.  And I hope each of us has the love and the courage to go out into our own lives and start to see invisible people for ourselves.

Q:  What’s next for you?

A:  I hope to keep traveling and speaking, telling the story of The Invisible Girls and hopefully encouraging people to see and care for the invisible people in their lives.  And I hope to keep writing, too.  I just finished writing my second book, which is scheduled for release in the fall of 2014.


Christian Piatt is an author, editor, speaker, musician and spoken word artist. He co-founded  in Pueblo, Colorado with his wife, Rev. Amy Piatt, in 2004.He is the creator and editor of BANNED QUESTIONS ABOUT THE BIBLE and . Christian published a memoir on faith, family and parenting in early 2012 called PREGMANCY: A Dad, a Little Dude and a Due DateVisit , or find him on Twitter or .

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