Description
Virginia Lieutenant Governor Winsome Earle-Sears shows readers how her Christian faith, unwavering patriotism, and fervent commitment to conservative principles propelled her to serve and sacrifice for her country and a better future.
Winsome Earle-Sears sent shockwaves across Virginia and the country at large when she pulled off her stunning upset victory in November 2021 and became the first woman lieutenant governor of Virginia and the first Black woman elected to statewide office. As a result, she earned intense national coverage—especially since the
hot-button topics teaching Critical Race Theory in schools and parental rights in education proved to be significant issues for voters—both in Virginia and across the country. In How Sweet It Is, Earle-Sears will tell her own story and detail how she arrived at that historic moment in time.
Earle-Sears, a devout Christian, is also a true believer in the promise of the American Dream. Her father left Jamaica and arrived in America on August 11, 1963, with only $1.75 in his pocket. When Earle-Sears was only six years old, she joined him in a new world. And ever since then, she has never ceased enthusiastically bucking conventions, defying expectations, and charging straight toward challenges.
Her love for her country drove her to serve in the U.S. Marine Corps, where she worked as an electrician. She later built and owned a successful electrical business. She led a men’s prison ministry and ran a women’s homeless shelter. Before becoming Virginia’s lieutenant governor, Earle-Sears served as the Vice President of the Virginia State Board of Education and received presidential appointments to the U.S. Census Bureau,
where she co-chaired the African American Committee, and the Advisory Committee on Women Veterans to the Secretary of Veterans Affairs. And in 2021, Earle-Sears and Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin stunned the nation when they wrested control of the Commonwealth from the Democrats, rewarding the hope that Virginia wouldn’t
permanently remain a blue state.
Earle-Sears’s remarkable story is one of faith and family, personal loss and perseverance, philanthropy and patriotism, service and sacrifice. She suffered a horrific personal tragedy when her daughter and two young granddaughters died in a car crash in 2012. But through it all, Earle-Sears’s Christian faith sustained her, drove her, and compelled her to give back to her community and her country. Her unyielding belief in the fundamental righteousness of America stands in stark opposition to the increasingly pervasive ideologies that are dividing the country along identarian lines. In How Sweet It Is, Earle-Sears encourages conservatives to never stop fighting for their principles and shows them how to chart a new path forward for God and country.
Distributor: 316Europe
Winsome Earle-Sears sent shockwaves across Virginia and the country at large when she pulled off her stunning upset victory in November 2021 and became the first woman lieutenant governor of Virginia and the first Black woman elected to statewide office. As a result, she earned intense national coverage—especially since the
hot-button topics teaching Critical Race Theory in schools and parental rights in education proved to be significant issues for voters—both in Virginia and across the country. In How Sweet It Is, Earle-Sears will tell her own story and detail how she arrived at that historic moment in time.
Earle-Sears, a devout Christian, is also a true believer in the promise of the American Dream. Her father left Jamaica and arrived in America on August 11, 1963, with only $1.75 in his pocket. When Earle-Sears was only six years old, she joined him in a new world. And ever since then, she has never ceased enthusiastically bucking conventions, defying expectations, and charging straight toward challenges.
Her love for her country drove her to serve in the U.S. Marine Corps, where she worked as an electrician. She later built and owned a successful electrical business. She led a men’s prison ministry and ran a women’s homeless shelter. Before becoming Virginia’s lieutenant governor, Earle-Sears served as the Vice President of the Virginia State Board of Education and received presidential appointments to the U.S. Census Bureau,
where she co-chaired the African American Committee, and the Advisory Committee on Women Veterans to the Secretary of Veterans Affairs. And in 2021, Earle-Sears and Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin stunned the nation when they wrested control of the Commonwealth from the Democrats, rewarding the hope that Virginia wouldn’t
permanently remain a blue state.
Earle-Sears’s remarkable story is one of faith and family, personal loss and perseverance, philanthropy and patriotism, service and sacrifice. She suffered a horrific personal tragedy when her daughter and two young granddaughters died in a car crash in 2012. But through it all, Earle-Sears’s Christian faith sustained her, drove her, and compelled her to give back to her community and her country. Her unyielding belief in the fundamental righteousness of America stands in stark opposition to the increasingly pervasive ideologies that are dividing the country along identarian lines. In How Sweet It Is, Earle-Sears encourages conservatives to never stop fighting for their principles and shows them how to chart a new path forward for God and country.
Distributor: 316Europe
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