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Biography - Large Print books

Posted in Biography (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Luther Benson. By BiblioBazaar. Sells new for $13.99. There are some available for $16.93.
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No comments about Fifteen Years in Hell (Large Print Edition): An Autobiography.




Posted in Biography (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by William Lawrence and Jill Andruszkiewicz. By Ulverscroft Large Print. There are some available for $110.29.
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No comments about Tales of a Gloucester Bloke (Reminiscence).




Posted in Biography (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Natalie Kusz. By Thorndike Pr. The regular list price is $20.95. Sells new for $6.99. There are some available for $0.65.
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5 comments about Road Song.

  1. In a culture that demonizes the poor and marginalizes the children of the poor, the Kusz family faces more than just 70 below temperatures, the author's tragic accident, hunger and squalor. Those who live more mainstream (read that affluent and conforming) lives, imagine those who live in rural (or urban) poverty as morally, intellectually and spiritually as well as financially impoverished. What Natalie Kusz does in this unforgettable memoir is to slow the reader down and draw her up close to those who travel that other road-- to allow the reader to view scenes of violence, abuse, charity and grace. The book is beautifully written. The only thing I would argue with is locating the father's backstory so close to the end of the book in one large chunk, instead of interspersing part of it throughout the book where it might shed some light on his own particular demons. Interestingly, I read each of the other reviews of this book and found in every one some bit of wisdom and thoughtfulness. This book is well worth reading twice--first for the story and then for a fruitful discussion of memoir.


  2. I was very excited when I found this memoir at a gently used bookstore. I thought it was very good. I felt like I was traveling to Alaska right along with Natalie. This is one of those books that you hope will have a sequel someday.


  3. I read this book years ago, and found it very moving. I think Ms. Kusz is a good writer and extremely courageous. Her childhood (quite honestly) sounds horrible, but her parents are very loving and kind and smart.

    One thing that did disturb me about the book was that Ms. Kusz seemed to need to convince us that her parents were right in leaving LA for Alaska. For example, she writes that she and her siblings (aged 1 to 7) were sick of modern life and its accroutrements. This is hard to believe! Little kids don't know enough about the world yet to be sick of it.

    In LA, her parents had a house, jobs, a large backyard, family close by, warm weather, etc. In Alaska, they had nothing. They didn't even have enough money to buy the land they wanted so much. How could her parents uproot four young kids for such an uncertain future! Can you imagine her mom's life--even before Natalie's terrible accident. Four little kids, no money, not enough food, husband away working, living in a trailer with no bathroom, the weather sometimes 50 or 60 below.

    All the things her parents wanted--outdoor life, contact with wildlife, streams, orchards, etc., -- none of that happens in Alaska. There's no mention of the family having fun doing "country" things. It seems their adventure was not successful. Perhaps if Natalie hadn't gotten hurt things might have been different, but it doesn't seem that likely. They still were poverty-stricken, without a home or a job, living in a place where it got 70 below. I once saw a review that said the Kusz decision to move was almost comprable to child abuse, and I am tempted to agree.

    With that said, I really admire Natalie's ability to rise above a terribly painful childhood, filled with extraordinary physical pain. I hope she is well and I wish she'd write another book.


  4. Originally it was the title that popped out on this one: aha! another great travel novel, I hoped. Oh no, much better and much more intense!!! A woman reconstructs for us the story of her unusual "hippy" parents, her father a refugee from Poland's wartime harshness. The parents have four children and cannot stand the modern life of the Southern California suburbs. Off they go, packed up in an old truck, all the way to Alaska. With a relative's gift/loan, they buy land and begin to build a house on the outskirts of Fairbanks. Needless to say, money is very tight, jobs are scarce, and the winter is setting in. The parents scrounge through the Salvation Army and the local U.S. Army dump for supplies, even finding food to keep them going. They are true pioneers in the face of horrible winter weather: -50F in a perpetual icefog, through which the kids sometimes trek to get to the the schoolbus stop.

    Natalie's account of her horrific accident, when underfed huskies break their chains and rip her face off, ruining one eye, is one of these memoirs almost impossible to believe is true. But yes, it is true, and luckily the parents have insurance, and are able, in the late 1960's, to save their daughter, fight infection from reaching her brain, and have her face reconstructed over years of medical appointments.

    In addition to this horrible disaster, the parents are barely making it financially, and for years, simply live together packed in a trailer out in the wilderness, far from town. The kids get older, need to go to school, and find that the local town is full of rough-tough kids, mainly from the U.S.Army base, who early fall into drugs, drinking and promiscuity. So of course, our Natalie does so as well, but doesn't tell her parents, until the news she can't avoid: she's pregnant at 16.

    On and on this story goes, and makes the reader want to keep on going for more. It's true that it's not exceptionally well-written - certainly it seems a bit too casual in its style. The author, only 27, does come across as self-involved, but perhaps that's understandable. Her mother's early death and father's early onset of heart disease make this tragedy almost unbearable. One wonders how she really could have done it all, including with the little girl, raising her alone.

    Definitely a great read, not at all typical "American" in any yearning for a better life. She concludes that she is attached to Alaska and decides at the time of writing (1990) that she will go back and stay up there, near her father's house.


  5. As a fellow writer oh how I hated Natalie Kusz as I read her book. She is that rare combination of a brilliant writer and someone with something to say. I could barely contain my envy, and admiration, as I read. This is a book that disappoints only because it ends.


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Posted in Biography (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Douglas Fairbanks. By BiblioBazaar. Sells new for $13.99. There are some available for $16.27.
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No comments about Laugh and Live (Large Print Edition).




Posted in Biography (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Peter Carrick. By Ulverscroft Large Print. There are some available for $49.95.
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No comments about Barbra Streisand: A Biography (Charnwood Large Print Library Series).




Posted in Biography (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Margaret Lane. By ISIS Large Print Books. There are some available for $65.49.
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2 comments about The Tale of Beatrix Potter: A Biography.

  1. When I first began this book, I was a bit skeptical. I wasnt sure at all that I could make it through the whole thing. But after a few chapters, I found myself falling in love with Miss Potter. It is a great story, for unlike most biographies I have read, It ends on a happy note. Her final years were much better than her first.


  2. The late Margaret Lane, President of The Women's Press Club, the Dickens Fellowship, the Johnson Society, the Brontë Society and the Jane Austen Society has written this charming little book about Beatrix Potter.

    Beatrix Potter's life was a very private one, carefully hidden from the public eye, although she is known and loved by generations of children. Her life began in joylessness and solitude, with drawing as her one fascination.

    In the book we follow Beatrix Potter through her sad childhood, her struggle for independence, her illfated love affair and happy marriage, and we learn about how she created all these charming and whimsical characters - Peter Rabbit, Mrs. Tiggy-Winkle, Jemima Puddle-Duck, Tom Kitten and so many more. The book is illustrated with old photographs, and pen and ink illustrations by Beatrix Potter herself. A must for any Beatrix Potter lover.

    Britt Arnhild Lindland



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Posted in Biography (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Henry Bibb. By ReadHowYouWant. The regular list price is $12.99. Sells new for $9.99. There are some available for $16.08.
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No comments about Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Henry Bibb (EasyRead Edition): An American Slave.




Posted in Biography (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Elizabeth Charlotte d'Orleans. By www.ReadHowYouWant.com. Sells new for $22.99.
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No comments about Entire Memoirs of Louis XIV and the Regency, The (Large Print).




Posted in Biography (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Vernon Scannell. By ISIS Large Print Books. Sells new for $24.95. There are some available for $18.00.
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No comments about Drums of Morning: Growing Up in the Thirties (ISIS Large Print).




Posted in Biography (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Frederick Douglass. By ReadHowYouWant. The regular list price is $13.99. Sells new for $10.49.
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No comments about Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass (EasyRead Large Bold Edition).




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Last updated: Sun Sep 7 13:58:52 EDT 2008