Posted in Biography (Friday, September 5, 2008)
Written by Charles Edward Stowe. By BiblioBazaar.
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No comments about Life of Harriet Beecher Stowe (Large Print Edition).
Posted in Biography (Friday, September 5, 2008)
Written by Henry James. By Echo Library.
The regular list price is $16.90.
Sells new for $14.28.
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No comments about The Author of Beltraffio (Large Print).
Posted in Biography (Friday, September 5, 2008)
Written by Elizabeth Drew. By Thorndike Press.
The regular list price is $30.95.
Sells new for $25.42.
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No comments about Richard M. Nixon (Thorndike Press Large Print Biography Series).
Posted in Biography (Friday, September 5, 2008)
Written by Billy Graham. By HarperLuxe.
The regular list price is $21.95.
Sells new for $5.76.
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No comments about Just As I Am LP.
Posted in Biography (Friday, September 5, 2008)
Written by William Henry Hudson. By ReadHowYouWant.
The regular list price is $22.99.
Sells new for $17.49.
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No comments about Far Away And Long Ago (EasyRead Large Bold Edition).
Posted in Biography (Friday, September 5, 2008)
Written by Lynne Cox. By Thorndike Press.
Sells new for $29.95.
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5 comments about Grayson.
- Reading "Grayson" is ....like Ms. Cox's 'Swimming to Antarctica" so wordy and stretched that the reader may give up before finishing. I did finish Grayson because I wanted to know the ending. I had even thought, when first reading, that I would give this book to my daughter who teaches Reading to fifth graders. But....I decided against it for the reason that I know they would love the first but really get bogged down before the final page. It's a great story but could have been condensed into perhaps 10 pages.
- The book grayson, a true life story of a then seventeen year old woman who encounters a baby gray whale in the Pacific near Long Beach, is a story that is poetically and so beautifully told it will linger, I guarantee, in the mind of the reader for a long time, if not forever. This book, about interspecies communication is so beautifully written that I have nothing but admiration for the writer and her exquisite sensitivity. It is a story that is deeply philosophical in nature as the writer describes metaphorically her maintenance of personal positivity and her own soul desire to communicate with this whale and its lost mother. Can we communicate non verbally, with each other, with other species? Read this book and ponder deeply. I recommend this and hope you love it as much as I did and do!
- Grayson, by Lynne Cox is a wonderful concise book with lots to say. There are three different story threads running through it. The smaller thread is about a girl athlete with lots of will and determination, and the second is a nature story about the sea animals in southern California and the third thread is the most moving. It is an inspirational story about a girl tiring to help a young baby whale finds its mother. It is a story for all ages. I'm 38 and I loved it, bought one for my 1st edition collection, and I bought another for my younger ten-year-old sister.
- While listening to this tale as an audiobook, I was surprised to be sitting at the edge of my recliner! For a very simple premise, Lynne Cox crafted a plot with a lot of excitement.
I was touched by the sense of communion between the human swimmer and the baby whale, each of them vulnerable and exposed.
The communication and intelligence of the whales in this story, plus a mega-pod of dophins, made me think of the line, "Goodbye, and thanks for all the fish!" the title of Douglas Adams' fourth book in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series. (Where Wonko the scientist posits that dolphins were the actual creators of planet Earth.)
I now own Grayson in an audio format and as a hardcover book, and I consider it a treasure.
- A sweet story for any age. True, and the information given is stunning. Imagine swimming with a whale! Would be good to read aloud to a 9-12 year old, but I cry everytime with joy at the ending.
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Posted in Biography (Friday, September 5, 2008)
Written by George Edward Woodberry. By BiblioBazaar.
Sells new for $16.99.
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No comments about Nathaniel Hawthorne (Large Print Edition).
Posted in Biography (Friday, September 5, 2008)
Written by John Gross. By ISIS Large Print Books.
The regular list price is $32.50.
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2 comments about A Double Thread: A Childhood in Mile End--And Beyond (Reminiscence).
- I really enjoyed this book, especially the last chapter, in which Gross tells about his reading. Like Gross, I love books about books. Like Gross, I read a lot of comic books in my youth (mainly Wonder Woman) and, later, mysteries (all of Conan Doyle and Agatha Christie and many more). Like Gross, I thought there would always be time later to read the classics, and also like him, I tend to pick up whatever catches my eye at the library. Now I'm 63, and although I've read much of the great stuff, there's still much to be read. My tastes don't run to T. S. Eliot and Gross's moderns but backward to the nineteenth-century English novelists and beyond.
Gross has a pleasant, low-key style and, it seemed to me, a realistic take on childhood and its memories.
- In at least one sense, the title is misleading: What Gross has accomplished in this volume is to weave an enormous, vividly colorful, and immensely intricate tapestry with almost infinite "threads" or themes. They include "the story of [his] two separate entwined legacies of being English and being Jewish" during 1935-52 as well as the Battle of Britain when he and his mother were relocated from London to Sussex to avoid the Blitz, the gradual awareness of the Holocaust, and eventually the establishment of the State of Israel.
For me, one of Gross's most powerful qualities is his modesty (almost self-deprecation) as his memoir proceeds through such volatile times. For example, on the matter of anti-Semitism, he observes that "to have had a religious upbringing at least assures that in your own mind you are a Jew first, and the object of other people's dislike second." Young Gross seems to have been spared the ordeal of what other Jews his age experienced during the Third Reich. With regard to his own faith, "for many Jews, whatever the larger historical balance sheet, anti-Semitism is the heart of the matter, the only significant reason why they still feel Jewish." I was also deeply moved by his portrayal of his father, Avraham ben Oser, who became a doctor. The adult Gross very closely resembles that wise and generous man. It is not so much that father and son tolerate anti-Semitism; rather, that they absorb it and thereby deprive it of any legitimacy. Frequently as I read this book, I wondered what their conversations would have discussed had young Andras Grof emigrated to London rather than to New York and become friends with young Gross. (Grof changed his name to Grove and later served as CEO of Intel Corporation. I highly recommend his own memoir, Swimming Across.) The balance of Gross's engaging and eloquent autobiography reveals his thoughts and feelings about the Cold War years during which Stalin executed so many Jewish artists and writers. He also comments insightfully on T.S. Eliot ("who may be a great poet but he isn't greater than the Jewish people") and W.H. Auden whose social values are more compatible with Gross's own. There is great sensitivity in this book but almost no sentimentalism. Were a higher rating available, I would gratefully give it to this unique and compelling personal narrative.
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Posted in Biography (Friday, September 5, 2008)
Written by Joseph Conrad. By Echo Library.
The regular list price is $25.90.
Sells new for $24.07.
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No comments about Notes on Life and Letters (Large Print).
Posted in Biography (Friday, September 5, 2008)
Written by Laura Shaine Cunningham. By ISIS Large Print Books.
The regular list price is $26.95.
Sells new for $12.57.
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5 comments about Sleeping Arrangements.
- I found myself struggling to finish this book. I almost gave up several times. The first several pages were quite good then it looses steam.
- Very well written. I felt I had met these people. The writer's words flow smoothly, and I had to slow myself down or the book would have ended too soon. Some of things very young Lily and friend did were hair-raising (in a dark park, cavorting with perverts). What I liked best about this book were her uncles, particularly Uncle Gabe. In fact, I have now purchased Laura Cunningham's book "A Place in the Country" so I can read more about her uncles. I enjoy memiors that deal with unconventional families that provide a nurturing environment and a great deal of love, and this book is that sort of memior.
- I cannot wait to read more of her work. I loved this book! I loved her writing. This is a must read!
- This book's emphasis on prurient material turned me off. Also, the "characters" did not seem to behave in an age appropriate manner, which led me to wonder if the author didn't exaggerate many of the escapades described in the book.
- Like another reader, I was drawn to the unusual cover of this book--a sweet lil' girl's face superimposed over a faded shot of two older men--in these pedophiliactic times of Michael Jackson and Catholic priests, I assumed it was yet another sad story of abuse. Wronnnngg! This is so outrageously funny that you can almost laugh through the sad passages, while still appreciating the depth of tragedy that befell Shaine's unusual childhood. Her uncles really did sound like a couple of Marx brothers, but the love this odd family shared always shines. I'd teach it in my high school classes, but a few passages here and there probably make it questionable--although the haunting description of her continuing search for her father would resonate with many kids. A great find that I stumbled on while hunting for something else at B and Noble.
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