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Book Cover for: A Chance, Cristina Durán

A Chance

Cristina Durán

For Cris and Miguel, creating a family will take a little luck and lots of determination. A Chance is the engrossing, heartwarming story of their struggles and triumphs.

The narrative follows Cristina Durán and Miguel Giner Bou as they rebuild and reinvent themselves after their daughter Laia is born with cerebral palsy. Hospitals, rehabilitation centers, and doctors become part of their daily routine. There is one chance in a thousand that Laia will pull through--and they hold on to that chance with tremendous strength and indomitable joy.

Years later, with the same courage and determination, Cristina and Miguel embark on the arduous process of adopting their second daughter, Selam, from Ethiopia. This time, they face a long period of training, psychological tests, interviews, and formalities before they can even pack their bags. And when they return with Selam, the challenge of reinvention awaits them yet again.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Graphic Mundi
  • Publish Date: Nov 30th, 2021
  • Pages: 312
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 9.50in - 6.80in - 1.20in - 2.10lb
  • EAN: 9781637790038
  • Recommended age: 12-UP
  • Categories: Nonfiction - Biography & MemoirChildren with Special NeedsAdoption & Fostering

About the Author

Durán, Cristina: - Cristina Durán and Miguel Giner Bou are graduates of the Facultad de Bellas Artes de Valencia. They started out in animation, and in 1993 they founded their studio, LaGRUAestudio, where they work as professional illustrators and comic creators. In 2019, they were awarded Spain's Premio Nacional del Cómic for EL DÍA 3.

Praise for this book

PUBLISHERS WEEKLY -- Durán and Giner Bou depict distinct experiences in parenthood with love and charm in a graphic memoir that runs by turns from harrowing to lighthearted. When the couple's first daughter, Laia, suffers brain damage shortly after birth, father Migue observes, "I see myself [like] a camera filming the scene...'Oof, I'm in a Lars Von Trier film.' " As Laia's prognosis remains uncertain, her parents feel the pull of the "abyss," represented by an inky blob that fills their bodies. But they are buoyed by supportive family and friends-not to mention Spain's socialized health care-and they take on the life of special-needs parenting with gusto and gratitude. They've always hoped to adopt, scowling at an assuming adoption professional who quips, "So [having a disabled child] doesn't happen again, right?" The yearslong process of paperwork, training, interviews, and waiting to welcome a child from Ethiopia is depicted as a towering maze, and inequities between Spain and Ethiopia are neither foregrounded nor swept under the rug. Three-year-old Selamawit settles into her new family after a period of adjustment for all. Durán and Bou draw their characters with confident lines, curves, and angles, and kind eyes. It's a comic that aptly captures the often rigorous work necessary in building a family. (Dec.)