3 Books Published by Wordeee on AALBC — Book Cover Collage

Click for more detail about Silence and Resistance: Memoir of a Girlhood in Haiti by Monique Clesca Silence and Resistance: Memoir of a Girlhood in Haiti

by Monique Clesca
Wordeee (Sep 16, 2025)
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On January 12, 2010, a powerful earthquake shook Haiti, killing and injuring thousands. In a few seconds, the author’s identity was torn apart with all the landmarks of her life shattered, sending her into a transformative journey of self-discovery.

Silence and Resistance recounts the author’s upbringing under state-sponsored terror, domestic violence, forced silence, the bewilderment of loss, and generational secrets. It is also a haunting narrative of the author’s profound journey to uncover and reckon with the buried secrets of her family’s past.

Set against the rich backdrop and singular history of Haiti, this poignant tale explores the complexities of love, trauma, and identity through the lens of a father’s dark legacy. When she discovered that her father committed an unspeakable act, the revelation shattered Monique’s understanding of family. Forced to confront the silence that has long shielded the truth, she must navigate the emotional turmoil of betrayal and the weight of inherited pain. She must, too, reconcile her love for a man who was both a nurturing parent and a perpetrator of violence.

Through vivid and expert storytelling and intimate reflections, Silence and Resistance delves into the psychological scars left by familial secrets and the struggle for personal redemption. It is a powerful exploration of the necessity to confront uncomfortable truths, break the chains of silence, and ultimately find healing with one’s own voice and destiny in the embrace of honesty.


Click for more detail about The Women Who Raised Me (Legacy Edition) by Victoria Rowell The Women Who Raised Me (Legacy Edition)

by Victoria Rowell
Wordeee (Mar 05, 2025)
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Born a ward of the state in the State of Maine, the child of a Yankee blueblood mother, Dorothy (Collins) Rowell, and a Black Marine, Levi (Cowan) Wilson, from South Carolina, Victoria Rowell beat the odds that befall many foster children.

The Women Who Raised Me is the remarkable story of her rise out of the foster care system to attain the American Dream and of the myriad women who lifted her up, inspired her, and seeded her with the drive and commitment it took to claim her place in the world. The Women Who Raised Me is a loving tribute to the stalwart, honorable women…from pianist and horticulturist, Agatha Armstead, a Black Bostonian, and Victoria’s primary foster mother who noticed her spark for creativity and innate passion for ballet, to Esther Brooks, her first official ballet teacher and benefactress at the prestigious Cambridge School of Ballet in Massachusetts. As pivotal was Vicki’s no-nonsense social worker, Linda Webb.

The sheer determination of these diverse women fortified Victoria during her unlikely arrival in New York City at age seventeen with a full scholarship to study at the American Ballet Theater School. Transfixing and redemptive, The Women Who Raised Me is both heartbreaking and heartwarming, ultimately, inspiring. The Legacy Edition of her NY Times bestseller is a tribute to all the children who deserve to have someone to hold their hand, and their space, and to remind them everyone deserves love, beauty, and the belief that everything is possible.


Click for more detail about The Wig, The Bitch & The Meltdown by Jay Manuel The Wig, The Bitch & The Meltdown

by Jay Manuel
Wordeee (Aug 03, 2020)
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The Wig, The Bitch & The Meltdown is a satirical look behind the scenes of Model Muse, a fictional reality model competition show and global phenomenon. Seen through the eyes of our moral compass Pablo Michaels—the heart of production in the helter-skelter world of Model Muse-we see behind the scenes and backstage shenanigans of the fashion/reality TV world. As “The Fixer,” Pablo is the man everyone turns to in crisis. Struggling to hold the fledgling production together, he juggles his duties to his “BFF,” the ruthless and vulnerable antihero Keisha Kash, his Supermodel boss while trying to hold on to his own soul.

When the show is renewed after its sensational first season, this satire takes up where The Devil Wears Prada left us, only now we’re on the runway, itself. Think Crazy Rich Asians meets Ladies Who Punch and a dish of Dulce de Leche,