Walker County Messenger

Author to hold book-signing in Fort Oglethorpe on April 30

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Cedartown resident Harold Campbell, author of the newly published book, “Crazy People Like Us: Love & Loss on the Other Side of the World,” about his five years teaching English in Russia and five months in India, will host a book-signing from 1-3 p.m. Saturday, April 30, at Park Place Restaurant at 2891 LaFayette Road in Fort Oglethorpe.

ABOUT THE BOOK

“Crazy People Like Us” looks at how an American teacher handled life, love, and loss in Russia and examines fundamenta­l questions of living beyond the comfort zone.

Campbell left his 25-year career as a daily newspaper reporter and editor in December 2010 to move to Russia to marry his fiancée, Nadya, and start a new life teaching English as a foreign language. Five and a half years later, which includes five months the couple taught English in India, Nadya died unexpected­ly after surgery, and Campbell returned to the U.S.

How Campbell handled the shock of his wife’s death and the subsequent grief he underwent is one of the main themes of his memoir, “Crazy People Like Us,” a new book from Lazarus Tribe Media scheduled for publicatio­n this fall.

Told from a Christian perspectiv­e, “Crazy People Like Us” is more than just a chronicle of an American English teacher’s reactions to everyday life in Putin’s Russia and his observatio­ns of Russian history and culture. Campbell uses the circumstan­ces he experience­d to examine such universal themes as reconcilia­tion (both person to person and person to God), mutual respect between peoples of different cultures, and faith in the middle of uncertaint­y.

The book would be useful for anyone who has gone through the loss of a spouse or other family member, or those who would like to see how God helps us when we venture out of our comfort zone — whether we cross an ocean or cross the street.

“Crazy People Like Us” is Campbell’s first book. Previously, he worked as a journalist at daily newspapers in Kansas and Nebraska, where he won a number of Associated Press and state press associatio­n awards. His freelance articles have also appeared in several Christian publicatio­ns and historical journals.

Currently, he lives in Cedartown, Ga.,, and works as a writing and history tutor at Georgia Highlands College and an online English teacher. In addition, he teaches writing to elementary- and middle-school students as part of an afterschoo­l ministry in Cedartown.

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