Other books in the Zonderkidz Biography Series
Beyond the Music: The Bono Story
Defender of Faith: The Mike Fisher Story
Driven by Faith: The Trevor Bayne Story
Gift of Peace: The Jimmy Carter Story
Heart of a Champion: The Dominique Dawes Story
Linspired: The Jeremy Lin Story
Man on a Mission: The David Hilmer Story
Prophet with Honor: The Billy Graham Story
Reaching New Heights: The Kelly Clark Story
Speed to Glory: The Cullen Jones Story
Also by Gregg Lewis and Deborah Shaw Lewis
The Admiral: The David Robinson Story
ZONDERKIDZ
Gifted Hands, Revised Kids Edition
Copyright 2013 by Gregg Lewis and Deborah Shaw Lewis
Requests for information should be addressed to:
Zonderkidz, 3900 Sparks Drive, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49546
ePub Edition April 2014: ISBN 978-0-310-73831-2
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Lewis, Gregg, 1951
Gifted hands : the Ben Carson story / Gregg Lewis and Deborah Shaw Lewis.
p. cm.
Rev. ed. of: Gifted hands. c2009.
ISBN 978-0-310-73830-5 (softcover)
1. Carson, BenJuvenile literature. 2. NeurosurgeonsUnited StatesBiographyJuvenile literature. 3. African American surgeonsBiographyJuvenile literature. I. Lewis, Deborah Shaw, 1951 II. Lewis, Gregg, 1951 Gifted hands. III. Title.
RD592.9.C37L49 2009b
617.48092dc22
2009005778
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Scripture quotations marked RSV are taken from The Revised Standard Version Bible, 1946, 1952, 1971 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of Churches of Christ in the USA. Used by permission.
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Interior design: Beth Shagene
Cover design: Mark Veldheer
Cover photo: Hilary Schwab, Shutterstock
Interior composition: Greg Johnson/Textbook Perfect
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Table of Contents
For a long time, Ben had sensed that something was wrong. He had not heard his parents scream or shout at one another for days. He seldom even heard them argue. Instead they would just quit talking to each other until the whole house filled with a deep and disturbing quiet. Those silences gradually became longer and much more frequent. His father seemed to be gone more and more.
Yet Ben was still surprised by his mothers announcement.
It started like any other day for eight-year-old Ben Carson and his ten-year-old brother, Curtis. But it turned unforgettably sad when their mother sat them down and told them, Boys, your father has moved out of this house. Hes not going to be living with us anymore.
I dont want him to leave! Ben cried. Please make him come back!
But his mother shook her head. Bennie, your father cant come back.
Why not? Ben wanted to know.
Hes done some... some bad things. And that was as much as she would tell Ben and Curtis.
Ben argued with his mother. If Daddy did something wrong, why cant you just forgive him and let him come home?
Its not that simple, she replied, looking like she was about to cry.
Ben wondered if hed done something to make his father angry. But Bens mother assured him that his daddy loved him very much and was not mad at him at all. Still, it hurt.
Bens heart was broken. He loved his daddy. Every night he prayed for his father to come home so their family could be together again. But that never happened.
When he left, Bens father took all of the familys money, including the nest egg Bens mother had managed to store up by scrimping and saving over the years. Mrs. Carson had no job skills or work experience, so the only way she could support herself and her two sons was by cleaning houses and taking care of other peoples children. It was hard work, but she was determined to do whatever it took to provide for her boys.
Even after he learned the truth, Ben continued to love his father in spite of what he had done. But Ben loved and respected his mother even more. He knew how hard she worked to take care of him and Curtis, and how much his fathers actions had hurt his mother.
Sonya Carson, Bens mother, had been born into a large and extremely poor rural Tennessee family. She was the next to the youngest of twenty-four children. Yet she only knew thirteen of her siblings because she spent most of her lonely and unhappy childhood moving from one foster home to another.
She had been just thirteen years old when she met and married Bens father, an older man who promised to rescue her from her sad situation and take her north to Detroit. He promised to provide her with a life of wealth and adventure. Bens father was a charming man and a good provider. He loved parties and seemed proud of his young wife. He often bought Bens mother expensive gifts of clothing and jewelry. Bens father seemed to spend money as fast as he earned it. Over time, Bens mother became concerned about their finances.
After the boys were born, Bens mother wondered where her husband was getting his extra money. She worried that he might be involved in selling alcohol or even drugs.
She finally found out that he had another wife and family, and Sonya told him to leave.
Ben found it tough to give up his hopes for a happy home where his family could all live together again. But the same year his father left, a new dream entered Bens life.
That dream was born one Sunday morning during church. Ben sat on the edge of the pew, listening intently, as their minister told an exciting true story about a missionary doctor.
Ben and Curtis Carson (back row) with childhood friends.
Robbers were chasing the doctor and his wife, the minister told them. They ran as fast as they could around trees and over rocks, trying to stay ahead of their pursuers. Then they came to the edge of a cliff. They had nowhere to go. But right at the very brink of the precipice, they spotted a crack in the rock just big enough for both of them to crawl into.
When the bandits got to the cliff, their would-be victims were nowhere to be seen. It was as if the doctor and his wife had vanished! The robbers didnt know what to think. They stomped around, cursing, then left. The missionaries were safe.
As the story ended, Ben breathed a sigh of relief. What a thrilling life missionaries must lead!
God hid his missionaries in the cleft of the rock, the pastor explained. And he will do the same for you if you give him your heart and let him protect you from harm.
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