Wednesday, January 26, 2011
5 Questions with Trent Reedy
Monday, January 24, 2011
LA Times Review and Interview with Author Trent Reedy
Soldier Trent Reedy steps up to help an Afghan girl
His 'Words in the Dust' evokes the life of a girl with a cleft lip. He helped her get surgery and promised to tell her story.

Trent Reedy, a former Iowa National Guardsman, is pictured with Zulaikha, the Afghan girl who is the subject of his book "Words in the Dust." (Trent Reedy / March 8, 2005)
January 24, 2011
Trent Reedy was an American soldier providing security for the reconstruction of Afghanistan when he saw her. The girl was 13, her cleft lip so deformed that her teeth stuck out straight from her mouth. Her upper lip was split in two. Her nose was distorted.
Shock was Reedy's reaction when he first saw the girl he came to know as Zulaikha — a girl who became the inspiration for, and centerpiece of, his debut young adult novel, "Words in the Dust." Based on Reedy's real-life experience helping Zulaikha get the corrective surgery she needed, "Words in the Dust" is a striking and beautifully told story — one that is unusual not only because it is by a first-time author, but also because it's told from Zulaikha's point of view.
It's difficult enough to write authentically about a foreign culture. It's even more difficult to write from the perspective of another gender. Yet Reedy, who was 26 when his contingent of the Iowa National Guard was deployed to a combat zone in the Western province of Farah, felt compelled to write about her.
Sunday, January 23, 2011
New Review up on HarleyMay.com
Trent Reedy’s WORDS IN THE DUST is a beautiful debut following the life of a thirteen-year-old girl in Afghanistan. After the defeat of the Taliban, Zulaikha hopes for peace. She hopes to go to school and possibly have her cleft palate fixed.
This is a daring look at Afghan culture, what the people of Afghanistan lost during the war against the Taliban, and what they now hope for. It is a book that changed me. As an American, I hear “Taliban” and probably like most of you, I become angry.
As I read, I realized how ignorant my anger is. Yes, Americans have a right to be angry, but I didn’t have any idea how the Taliban ravaged Afghanistan and their culture.
I urge you to read this book. It is a relevant and powerful study in culture, change, and the imperfection. It is marketed for 9-13 year olds, but is a book for children and adults alike. I loved it.
Trent Reedy is a quiet force and I’m thankful he shared this poignant story. Reedy became fascinated with Afghanistan when he served in the U.S. Army in 2004-2005. Upon his return to the United States, he enrolled in the Writing for Children MFA program at the Vermont College of Fine Arts, where he wrote the first drafts of this book. Ten percent of the author’s proceeds up to $10,000 will be donated to Women for Afghan Women, which advocates for the rights of women and girls in Afghanistan.
Visit HarleyMay.com by clicking here
New Review by SchoolLibraryJournal.com!
Review of the Day: Words in the Dust by Trent Reedy
Friday, January 14, 2011
Author Janet Fox Interviews Trent Reedy about WORDS IN THE DUST
Monday, January 10, 2011
Voices You Should Hear: Trent Reedy + Giveaway!
Thursday, January 13, 2011
Fan Posts a Video Trailer for "Words in the Dust"
First Review for Words in the Dust is in!
People around the world have their own customs, their own rituals. Cultural differences determine ways of living, influenced by geography, history and politics.
New author Trent Reedy creates a foreign yet familiar world in his debut novel "Words in the Dust" (Arthur A. Levine Books, ages 9-12). A world away in rural Afghanistan, a girl named Zulaikha exhibits the kind of strength of spirit that is heroic in any culture.
Zulaikha lives in a small Afghani village with her father, his second wife, three brothers and a sister. Readers first meet Zulaikha when she arises one morning to the sound of the prayer call.
She strives to be a good daughter and faithfully answers the prayer call each morning. She dearly loves her beautiful older sister, Zeynab, and struggles to get along with her father's difficult second wife, Malehkah.
Then Mr. Reedy reveals what marks Zulaikha as different from the beautiful Zeynab: She has a cleft lip.
The simple surgery involved in repairing a cleft lip is taken for granted by most people in America. For Zulaikha, the idea of repairing her disfigurement is the stuff of fantasy.
While she lives her life with a certain grace and humility, her deformity is a source of obvious disgust and disdain for many people in her village. It is only in the sanctuary of her home that Zulaikha feels comfortable. And even there she must deal with Malehkah's constant scrutiny and disapproval.
Read more: at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette