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I Kick and I Fly recent events

May 25: Pennsylvania, Community Response to Trafficking panel

May 23: New York, Books of Wonder, Great Contemporary Teen Reads

May 20: Atlanta, Carter Center discussion on human trafficking

May 11: hybrid, Conversation with Meena Yeggina

May 7: hybrid, Books of Wonder

May 5: Washington, DC, Vital Voices Festival

May 3: Harlem, Harlem Villages Academy

May 2: NYC, Harvard Club, hosted by TogetHER and 200 Women

May 1: hybrid,  The John Brademas Center of NYU

Apr 27: hybrid, Fordham University, Lincoln Center Campus

Apr 21: Broadcast, NBC News Today, Ruchira Gupta and Ashley Judd

Apr 20: Brooklyn, Greenlight Bookstore Flatbush Avenue

Apr 20: virtual, Anderson’s Bookshop, @AB.Teens Instagram Live

Apr 19: Pennsylvania, City of Asylum Bookstore

Apr 18: The launch of I Kick and I Fly!

Apr 13: Maryland, NEIBA Spring Forum

Apr 10: Illinois, Anderson’s Bookshop, @AB.Teens Instagram Live

 Apr 7: Texas, Independent Booksellers, SpringCon 23

Excerpt from I Kick and I Fly
by Ruchira Gupta

“…I wake up in a small room with dirty brick walls and a broken plank of wood on four legs for a bed. It’s dark except for the scraps of daylight that creep through the cracks in the wooden window and door. I stand up and the world reels. My hand goes to the back of my head and I feel a lump there, but it doesn’t seem to be bleeding.

Tentatively, I steady myself and take a step towards the door. I push it as hard as I can. It rattles but it doesn’t give way and I can see a chain on the other side. I’m locked in.

Through the crack, I can only see a small sliver of a wall. I could be anywhere. I feel the panic rise but don’t give in to it. I slide down to the floor and try to slow my breathing.

How long have I been here? If it’s still daylight, maybe a few hours. I close my eyes and try to pay attention to what I can hear. Soon, the Azaan starts, and I realize it is evening, around 5pm, and the prayer is the same one I hear every day from my own home. I’m not that far away after all.

I look around the room again now that my eyes have adjusted to the darkness. There’s a naked lightbulb in a corner, so there must be a switch somewhere. I grope around and finally find it behind the bed. The lightbulb goes on. And suddenly I know where I am, or at least the sort of place—I am in a brothel. Even if someone could hear me scream, they wouldn’t care.

It’s only then that I begin to feel the terror.

I am like water, I tell myself over and over again. I am like water…”