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LANDER, Wyo. It took a trip almost to the highest point in the world for Kari Grady Grossman to discover her professional calling in life.
In spring 2002, Grossman was tracking the Ford-sponsored womens expedition to the summit of Mount Everest (local Jody Thompson and former local Kim Clark were two of the climbers) as a writer for Discovery Channel online. On Mothers Day, at 18,000 feet elevation and 8,000 miles away from her 2-year-old adopted son, whom she desperately missed, she realized that adventure writing was no longer her dream.
That was a real defining moment, Grossman said.
She redirected her efforts toward researching a book on Cambodia, from where she adopted her son, Eric Ratanak Grady Grossman, in 2001 and where she and her husband sponsor a school in his name.
Four years later, she realized her goal, publishing Bones that Float a memoir of her experience adopting a child from poverty-stricken Cambodia and attempt to locate her sons anonymous birth mother intertwined with two stories of survival from native Cambodians. The first is the compelling, often heart-wrenching, recollections of Amanda Prom, a neighbor and friend of Grossmans in her hometown of Lander, Wyo., whose family lived through the cruel Khmer Rouge regime before escaping to the U.S. in the early 1980s. The second is of Sovann, an early 40s friend of the Grossmans who also lived through the Khmer Rouge, but stayed in Cambodia and his struggles to make a life for himself and his family in an economy devastated by war, even with an education.
The idea of weaving together the three stories, Grossman says, was to bring Cambodias troubled past, including enduring U.S. bombings in the late 1960s and early 1970s, to a mainstream audience.
Her inspiration came when she brought her new son home to the mountains of Wyoming in late 2001.
I was shocked and amazed that nobody around me seemed to know anything about what had happened in Cambodia, she said, referring to four years in the 1970s when the Khmer Rouge took over Cambodia. Anywhere from 1.5 to 2.5 million Cambodians died or disappeared during the brutal reign.
Bones that Float is on the shelves at both Webers Books and Hamlets Book Shoppe in Breckenridge, and has sold well.
Courtney Phillips, manager at Webers, just placed in a second order of 15 books after the first six copies sold out.
People really generally love it, she said. Theyre comparing it to (Greg Mortensons) Three Cups of Tea as far as tone and the way it made them feel. Its just really giving people some hope in a time when those kinds of feelings are few and far between for most of us.
Similar to Mortenson, who began building schools in Pakistan and Afghanistan after a failed K2 bid in 1993, the Grossmans quickly recognized the need for education in Cambodia.
Shortly after adopting Eric, Grossman and her husband sponsored the Grady Grossman School in the village of Chrauk Tiek in the Kampong Speu province near the Cardamom Mountains.
It started with 50 kids studying on a dirt floor under a dilapidated thatched roof. The school now serves 10 times the number of students and includes a teachers residence so educators can afford to instruct the kids.
With government salaries hovering around $25 a month, many instructors have traditionally made teaching a second priority to other odd jobs that paid the bills.
In many new buildings, theres no education going on because the teachers dont make enough money to live so they dont show up to work, Grossman said.
Supporting teachers with a food stipend and residence enabled more teachers to educate full-time and therefore more kids to attend school.
Grossman, who visits Cambodia every year, is now aiming to develop a lifeskills training center at the school to equip students with crafts that can provide a means of income.
For instance, teaching students how to grow agriculture or developing cooking fuels alternatives to wood to help curb illegal logging in the forest a huge problem near Chrauk Tiek.
Eventually she hopes the life skills model can spread to other schools in Cambodia.
What I envision is not building more schools. Its making the schools already built function independent of the government and self-sustaining, Grossman said.
A quarter of all the profits from Bones that Float go to the Friends of the Grady Grossman School. For more information, visit www.gradygrossmanschool.org.
Nicole Formosa can be reached at (970) 668-4629, or at nformosa@summitdaily.com.
In spring 2002, Grossman was tracking the Ford-sponsored womens expedition to the summit of Mount Everest (local Jody Thompson and former local Kim Clark were two of the climbers) as a writer for Discovery Channel online. On Mothers Day, at 18,000 feet elevation and 8,000 miles away from her 2-year-old adopted son, whom she desperately missed, she realized that adventure writing was no longer her dream.
That was a real defining moment, Grossman said.
She redirected her efforts toward researching a book on Cambodia, from where she adopted her son, Eric Ratanak Grady Grossman, in 2001 and where she and her husband sponsor a school in his name.
Four years later, she realized her goal, publishing Bones that Float a memoir of her experience adopting a child from poverty-stricken Cambodia and attempt to locate her sons anonymous birth mother intertwined with two stories of survival from native Cambodians. The first is the compelling, often heart-wrenching, recollections of Amanda Prom, a neighbor and friend of Grossmans in her hometown of Lander, Wyo., whose family lived through the cruel Khmer Rouge regime before escaping to the U.S. in the early 1980s. The second is of Sovann, an early 40s friend of the Grossmans who also lived through the Khmer Rouge, but stayed in Cambodia and his struggles to make a life for himself and his family in an economy devastated by war, even with an education.
The idea of weaving together the three stories, Grossman says, was to bring Cambodias troubled past, including enduring U.S. bombings in the late 1960s and early 1970s, to a mainstream audience.
Her inspiration came when she brought her new son home to the mountains of Wyoming in late 2001.
I was shocked and amazed that nobody around me seemed to know anything about what had happened in Cambodia, she said, referring to four years in the 1970s when the Khmer Rouge took over Cambodia. Anywhere from 1.5 to 2.5 million Cambodians died or disappeared during the brutal reign.
Bones that Float is on the shelves at both Webers Books and Hamlets Book Shoppe in Breckenridge, and has sold well.
Courtney Phillips, manager at Webers, just placed in a second order of 15 books after the first six copies sold out.
People really generally love it, she said. Theyre comparing it to (Greg Mortensons) Three Cups of Tea as far as tone and the way it made them feel. Its just really giving people some hope in a time when those kinds of feelings are few and far between for most of us.
Similar to Mortenson, who began building schools in Pakistan and Afghanistan after a failed K2 bid in 1993, the Grossmans quickly recognized the need for education in Cambodia.
Shortly after adopting Eric, Grossman and her husband sponsored the Grady Grossman School in the village of Chrauk Tiek in the Kampong Speu province near the Cardamom Mountains.
It started with 50 kids studying on a dirt floor under a dilapidated thatched roof. The school now serves 10 times the number of students and includes a teachers residence so educators can afford to instruct the kids.
With government salaries hovering around $25 a month, many instructors have traditionally made teaching a second priority to other odd jobs that paid the bills.
In many new buildings, theres no education going on because the teachers dont make enough money to live so they dont show up to work, Grossman said.
Supporting teachers with a food stipend and residence enabled more teachers to educate full-time and therefore more kids to attend school.
Grossman, who visits Cambodia every year, is now aiming to develop a lifeskills training center at the school to equip students with crafts that can provide a means of income.
For instance, teaching students how to grow agriculture or developing cooking fuels alternatives to wood to help curb illegal logging in the forest a huge problem near Chrauk Tiek.
Eventually she hopes the life skills model can spread to other schools in Cambodia.
What I envision is not building more schools. Its making the schools already built function independent of the government and self-sustaining, Grossman said.
A quarter of all the profits from Bones that Float go to the Friends of the Grady Grossman School. For more information, visit www.gradygrossmanschool.org.
Nicole Formosa can be reached at (970) 668-4629, or at nformosa@summitdaily.com.
Event and book signing
Kari Grady Grossman will have a booth on Breckenridge Main Street during the Mountain 2 Mountain Race for the Mountains on June 24. Also on June 24, she will sign copies of the book at Webers Books in Breckenridge from 4-6 p.mShell be back at Hamlets Book Shoppe for a book signing at the end of August.


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