The Girl Who Saw Heaven: A Fateful Tornado and a Journey of Faith

The Girl Who Saw Heaven: A Fateful Tornado and a Journey of Faith

The Girl Who Saw Heaven: A Fateful Tornado and a Journey of Faith

The Girl Who Saw Heaven: A Fateful Tornado and a Journey of Faith

Audio CD

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Overview

A remarkable true story of one child’s survival and transcendence after surviving a super tornado, and her amazing journey into the afterlife.

When Ari Hallmark was six years old, her family was caught in a powerful tornado in their hometown of Arab, Alabama. On the day of the storm, the Hallmarks were putting the finishing touches inside their new home, which Ari’s father, Shane, had built with his own two hands. That day Shane Hallmark got a call from his mother. She was afraid she wouldn’t be able to carry the twin toddlers, Ari’s cousins, into the storm shelter if the storm got as bad as the meteorologist warned. Concerned, Shane decided to head straight for his childhood home. Refusing to let him go alone, Ari and her mother came with him.

When they arrived, the storm was right on their tail. Ari and her relatives huddled in the bathroom to wait out the storm. After the Category 4 tornado passed through the home Ari’s family was killed. Everything for miles was flattened. A neighbor who also survived the storm found Ari’s unconscious and battered body thirty yards from the house. When she regains consciousness in a hospital Ari recounts the extraordinary story of accompanying her family to heaven. Ari is now a high school senior determined to share this hopeful message with the world: you will see your loved ones again.

Beyond the Storm adds to the cannon of remarkable near-death experiences, along with stories of people who follow their loved ones briefly to the afterlife. This book will leave you less terrified of death and more hopeful about what lies beyond.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781797157474
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Audio
Publication date: 05/09/2023
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 1.50(h) x 5.00(d)

About the Author

Dr. Lisa Reburn has a PhD in Education and a master’s degree in Visual Impairments, as well as master-level endorsements in Education Administration, Early Childhood Special Education, and Orientation and Mobility (a specialty area in the field of blindness). Lisa retired from her thirty-four-year career in education in late 2017. After her first child, Michelle, died at birth in 1992 from a common and preventable but relatively unknown infection called Group B Strep (GBS), Lisa advocated locally, then nationally, for a protocol change to include routine screening for all pregnant women. This advocacy took four years to finally pay off with the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) Protocol change following a segment on the Today show produced with Lisa. By the time the ACOG protocol change took place, Lisa had two healthy sons, Tyler and Michael.

Alex Tresniowski is a writer who lives and works in New York. He was a writer for both Time and People magazines, handling mostly human-interest stories. He is the author or coauthor of more than twenty books. For more about this story and the author, please visit AlexTres.com.

Nancy Peterson loves to weave a great story with her words. With over twenty-five years of experience in theater, television, film, commercial voiceover, and audiobook narration, she brings depth, passion, and nuance to every project, capturing the heart of each of them.

Stephanie Einstein is a driven, multi-talented actress with a passion for telling stories.

Some of her theatrical credits include: Proof (Catherine), Midsummer Night’s Dream (Hermia), and LA Weekly-Awarded Patty: The Revival (Jessica).

Recent TV and film credits include: ALIENS & GUFORS, I Won’t Be Your Mirror (SHORTS TV), OMG EMT (TLC), and My Crazy Ex (Lifetime).

Quick on her feet, she’s studied Improv with Upright Citizens Brigade, and performed with Detour Improv Troupe. Stephanie also works as a professional audio book narrator for Bee Audio and audible.com.

A Georgia native, she began her professional training at the Cobb County Center for Excellence in the Performing Arts. She earned her BFA in Acting from Wright State University, where she was awarded the Tom Hanks Scholarship.

Read an Excerpt

Sixteen Days Out SIXTEEN DAYS OUT
April 11, 2011

Vestavia Hills, Alabama

It began, simply enough, as air.

Air caught between the higher atmospheric pressure near the earth’s surface and the lower pressure in the surrounding atmosphere, a tension of warring meteorological forces that spun the air into wind.

Winds that grew stronger over the tropical waters of the Gulf of Mexico and began whirling in a counterclockwise circle, propelling themselves out of the Gulf and toward the US coast, where electrical energy and booming shock waves transformed them into thunderstorms.

A long, sturdy, rolling line of thunderstorms, weak as they swept over Mississippi, but intensifying as they crossed the border into central Alabama late in the afternoon of April 11.

Thunderstorms that rumbled fourteen miles northeast into Vestavia Hills, a quiet Birmingham suburb, where, at 7:29 p.m. (central time), their peak winds were measured at 100 mph—powerful enough to earn them a new meteorological designation.

The storms were now a tornado.

A tornado that touched down somewhere behind the Vestavia Hills Police Department building on Montgomery Highway, and from there ripped through the playground and picnic table area in nearby Byrd Park, snapping or uprooting thirty towering pine trees, knocking over numerous large hardwoods on the grounds of the Vestavia Country Club, and dislodging drywall fasteners on a home next to the club, one of several houses damaged by the winds or falling trees.

And then—the tornado was over. It lasted one minute. It had a small impact area—one hundred yards wide by a half mile long. Its 100 mph winds made it an EF1 tornado, the second-least-dangerous type on the EF Scale, which rates tornadoes from zero to five based on wind strength and damage. The EF1 on April 11 did not, luckily, kill a single soul, and it was seen, for the most part, as a relatively minor weather event.

Only later would meteorologists look back on the tornado and see it as something else altogether—a harbinger of what was yet to come.

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