Biographies

Google

General

General
Family and Childhood
Women
Special Needs
Audio Books

Historical

Historical
British Historical
Canadian Historical
United States Historical
Civil War
Holocaust
Large Print
Military Leaders
Political Leaders
Presidents
Religious Leaders
Rich and Famous
Royalty
Prime Ministers

Ethnic

General
Black-African American
Australian
Chinese
Hispanic
Irish
Japanese
Jewish
Native American Indian
Native Canadian Indian
Scandinavian

Careers

Autobiographies and Memoirs
Astronauts
Business
Criminals
Doctors and Nurses
Journalists
Lawyers and Judges
Military and Spies
Philosophers
Scientists
Social Scientists and Psychologists
Sociologists
Teachers

Sports

General
Baseball
Basketball
Explorers
Football
Golf
Hockey
Soccer

Videos

General
A and E Biography
Hollywood
Intimate Portrait

HobbyDo


Search Now:

FAMILY AND CHILDHOOD BOOKS

Posted in Family and Childhood (Monday, September 8, 2008)

Written by Andrea Goldthwaite. By Word Association Publishers. The regular list price is $10.95. Sells new for $10.94. There are some available for $7.00.
Read more...

Purchase Information
No comments about The Captain and the Captives: An American Child Tries To Make Sense Out Of War.



Posted in Family and Childhood (Monday, September 8, 2008)

Written by Mollie Harris. By Ulverscroft Large Print. Sells new for $27.99.
Read more...

Purchase Information
No comments about The Green Years (Isis Nonfiction).



Posted in Family and Childhood (Monday, September 8, 2008)

Written by L. A. Langrick. By ISIS Large Print Books. The regular list price is $32.50. Sells new for $61.47. There are some available for $13.32.
Read more...

Purchase Information
No comments about Snowball: Go Find Yourself a School (Reminiscence).



Posted in Family and Childhood (Monday, September 8, 2008)

Written by Jade Snow Wong. By HarperCollins Publishers. The regular list price is $9.87. Sells new for $17.95. There are some available for $4.86.
Read more...

Purchase Information
5 comments about Fifth Chinese Daughter.
  1. In the book Fifth Chinese Daughter by Jade Snow Wong, the author tells readers about her childhood as a Chinese girl living in San Francisco. Ms. Wong gives readers a chance to see what life was like growing up during the early 1900ýs as a Chinese girl. Throughout the book, you learn many things Chinese-Americans do which are different from American customs. Readers are given an idea of how Chinese-Americanýs raised their families during that time. The author shows in vivid detail what happened to her and what she had to work for in her childhood.
    Jade Snow was brought up in a household that made sure their children knew their native culture as well as the culture around them. Since an early age, Jade was given Chinese lessons by her father until she was old enough to attend Chinese school everyday after her American classes were over. The book chronicles Jadeýs life from her early childhood to when she becomes a young woman living on her own. Throughout the book, you see Jade learn to do the shopping for the family, cope with problems in school like discrimination, get into college on her own, and find jobs for herself.
    There were many things I liked about this book. Even though, this book isnýt like the books I normally read, it was very hard to put down. The author writes her story in
    graphic details, which pulled me into the book. I loved how she talked about her father in many ways, how some days he believed in her and others, he had no confidence in her. Also, I believe that Jade was a strong girl throughout her childhood. This is because she had to live with such strict rules in her household like respecting her elders, and how if she or her siblings did anything wrong, they would get punished by getting whipped.
    If I were to compare this novel with others I have read, I would have to say that this novel is in my top 50 books I have ever read. I found that every page I turned in this book, I was wondering what would happen next. This novel was very fun to read because I liked learning about what life was like for a young Chinese-American Women growing up during the early 1900ýs.
    I would most likely recommend this novel to another, unless the person did not like autobiographies. I would recommend this book to people who like reading about people of different cultures. Jade Snowýs book is geared more to people who like to read about peopleýs cultures, but I think many would find this book very interesting.


  2. "You must have confidence that I shall remain true to the spirit of your teachings. I shall bring back to you the knowledge of whatever I learn." Fifth Chinese Daughter is an inspiring autobiography that traces the life of Jade Snow Wong from childhood to adulthood in San Francisco's Chinatown. In her book, Jade Snow describes the numerous hardships and rewards that shaped her life. Through her vivid descriptions, the reader is immersed in the Asian culture of early twentieth-century America. Looking through Jade Snow's eyes, the reader is able to experience the conflicting cultural experiences of the middle daughter of a large family of Chinese immigrants.
    Conforming to Chinese tradition, Jade Snow felt that her worth as an individual was dictated by her family. Although Jade Snow's father took pride in educating his daughters in both Chinese and American customs, he valued the future potential of his sons over that of his daughters. Jade Snow's childhood is tainted by unjust punishment and suppressed emotion. Such experiences led her to pursue independence and acknowledgment in a country that offered numerous opportunities for well-educated young woman. However, from her difficult childhood, Jade Snow learned discipline and respect, qualities that allowed her to succeed and gain respect from her family. It is fascinating to witness her transformation from a submissive child to a woman of integrity and perseverance.
    As Jade Snow tirelessly worked her way through college, she came to understand the injustices of Chinese tradition. Ironically, at this time, she also developed a greater appreciation for her Chinese heritage and through it discovered her life's passions. Despite the heavy skepticism and criticism of her family, Jade Snow pursued her dreams with optimistic determination, suffering many hardships along the way. In each of her life's stories she proves to us that great rewards come from hard work and unfailing belief in one's self. If you ever feel hopeless or just want to be inspired, Jade Snow's story will lift you out of your darkness.


  3. I usually don't write negative reviews, but I really was surprised by all the glowing reviews here. I truly think this is a terrible book and here is why.

    1). The characters are only skin deep. We never really get to know them beyond their attitudes toward Jade Snow. And Jade Snow herself is very opaque as well, we don't get to know more of her except that she is filial, hard-working and eager to please people. The insides of these characters are not alive and they resemble dull automatons carrying out the actions of a pre-determined script.

    2). The prose is very flat, so the end result reads like a very long summary of the plot rather than the book itself. The author crammed in many minutae of her life into the writing, with a emphasis on the details of food preparation. but most of the details are not evocative and fails to enrich the world she is trying to portray.

    3). A streak of very patronizing attitude to Asians Americans run through out the book. It culminate with a cringe-inducing climax of self-hate at the very end of the last chapter, in a scene meant to be the big emotional pay-off for the whole book. Jade Snow's father tearfully confess that he had done wrong by raising her under the backward Chinese culture, and that he should have raised her in the superior, freedom-loving Christian way.



  4. I became interested in buying this book after reading the author's fascinating story in the L.A. Times last year. Since reading Fifth Chinese Daughter a few months ago, I have given it as a gift to three friends who also found this young woman's story as heartwarming and courageous as I did. Side benefit: I learned a great deal about Chinese-American culture and about American history, circa 1930s - 1950s.

    It's also a great book for teen girls. Reading about Jade Snow's sometimes difficult youth and teen years and how she met her goals will be very inspirational to that age group.


  5. I first read The Fifth Chinese Daughter in about 1963 when I was 13 and living 30 miles south of San Francisco. Visiting Chinatown was my first exposure to a foreign culture. It was mysterious and exotic, and I wondered what went on behind the building fronts lining the narrow bustling streets. This book gave me my first glimpse into this other world; very heady stuff for a 13 year old girl. Fast forward 45 years, and I'm looking for a book to recommend to my book club. I had never forgotten The Fifth Chinese Daughter but assumed it was out of print. Imagine my surprise when I found two copies on the shelf of our local bookstore. I snapped up both copies and jumped in. The Fifth Chinese Daughter was just as captivating and poignant to me at age 57. I can now appreciate it from a new perspective, viewing this work as a precursor to the wonderful Chinese American literature that followed. I could go on....but suffice to say, read this book.


Read more...


Posted in Family and Childhood (Monday, September 8, 2008)

Written by John Burroughs. By Fredonia Books (NL). The regular list price is $24.95. Sells new for $17.47. There are some available for $17.47.
Read more...

Purchase Information
No comments about My Boyhood.



Posted in Family and Childhood (Monday, September 8, 2008)

Written by Doyle. By Vintage Books Canada. There are some available for $30.31.
Read more...

Purchase Information
4 comments about Rory & Ita.
  1. Sorry to say this makes two disappointing ones in a row for the otherwise terrific Roddy Doyle.Here he essentially transcribes and edits his parents' memoirs. I couldn't help thinking what a great present this book is for his family. By the same token, this oral history doesn't contain a story that will knock the reader out. This criticism comes in spite of the facts that I can't help liking his parents and it was presented coherently. Predictably, the author's family background pales significantly to his characters'. That I should have counted on.
    Alternately, Kevin Kearns' often hilarious oral history series on pre-WWII inner-Dublin is definitely worthwhile.


  2. I've read all of Roddy Doyle's books,and no doubt about it,this one is totally different.
    This is not a book about Roddy,as a matter of fact it is not really a book by Roddy at all.
    This is a book by Rory and Ita Doyle and about their lives and the lives of their parents,grandparents,families and friends.Not only it is written through their eyes and by them,Roddy is hardly even mentioned .His only involvement would seem to have been the catalyst between his parents and the publishers to make the book happen.
    Having said that,I found it a very well written and interesting read.It beautifully desceibes the lives,hopes,trials,tribulations,joys,sadness,struggles,family relations,friends,working,religious and all the other things involved in living in Ireland;during most of the 20th.Century.
    In many ways it was not all that different where I grew up in Nova Scotia,where many were of Irish and Scottish descent.
    In both places,as well as the rest of Europe and America,things were tough,jobs were hard to find,money was tight,but people survived,and in many ways were just as happy as today.
    My parents were born about 20 years earlier than Rory and Ita, and went through much the same things that they did working,creating a home and raising a family.I suppose that the biggest difference was that WW1 and WW2 affected things much differently here and The War of Independence certainly had profound effects there.But, inspite of those events ,life went on.
    Therefore;as a book that describes the way life went on throughout the 20th Century for a middle class family in Ireland,it is excellent.Wouldn't every family love to have one?It seems to me it would be a much more treasured heirloom than Great Grandmothers drop-leaf table.


  3. Since the other reviews here don't touch on what I see as the strengths of this book, here's my take.
    Roddy Doyle's first work of non-fiction is a low-key but deeply felt paean to his parents (and by extension life in mid-twentieth-century Dublin) in their own words. In alternating chapters, Rory and Ita Doyle tell of their immediate ancestors (including their own parents), their childhoods, meeting and marriage, and their life as a married couple, including seeing their children leave the nest as they ease into retirement. Details accumulate and create a pointillistic portrait of two people enmeshed in a large network of family and community ties, many less than idyllic, and of a group of lives lived with affection and a kind of quiet but ceaseless vigor.
    Real tragedy is a thread that runs through the book: Ita's own mother died when she was very young, and one of her children lived only a day. Her comment at the very end of the book is stoic but not self-dramatizing, and all the more moving for it.
    And the turbulent larger world is not ignored, but seen mostly in how it affects the family. Rory and Ita began life in what was essentially a nineteenth century world, and end this story in the twenty-first. The continuity of their lives, their sense of wonder at the new tempered by a sardonic sense that everything fresh must be evaluated carefully, makes their discussion of everything from Fred Astaire movies to the Internet interesting.
    The larger world also figures in other ways. Mentioned often, the violent history of Ireland, particularly in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, affects the choices made, not to mention the choices available, to many of the people mentioned. But as with American books about "the greatest generation," a key point is that those involved in the struggle knew what they were fighting for: the opportunity to go home and live what are, after all, ordinary lives. The anonyms who constitute the vast majority of all humans who have lived anywhere on this planet are by implication the real subjects of this book. And, perhaps, this book may also serve as a reminder that passion need not be fierce to be strong.


  4. Rory and Ita strike me as nice people who have worked hard; I just wish I could say they led lives that I found interesting. I admire Doyle for honoring his parents this way, but to put it bluntly, this was boring. Growing up, finding work, finding each other, a story that's been told a million times and most of the time in more interesting ways than can be found in this book. After 338 pages, Rory and Ita still remain ciphers, there's no real emotional depth on display; it's just the story of two people who led ordinary lives. That concept can often lead to a wondrous work of art, just not this time.


Read more...


Posted in Family and Childhood (Monday, September 8, 2008)

Written by Thomas Porky McDonald. By 1st Books Library. The regular list price is $18.95. Sells new for $11.84. There are some available for $18.74.
Read more...

Purchase Information
No comments about WHERE THE ANGELS BOW TO THE GRASS: A BOY'S MEMOIR.



Posted in Family and Childhood (Monday, September 8, 2008)

Written by Bill Williams. By Leathers Publishing. The regular list price is $11.95. Sells new for $7.75. There are some available for $4.93.
Read more...

Purchase Information
No comments about Memories of a Depression Baby.



Posted in Family and Childhood (Monday, September 8, 2008)

Written by Dene Lindley. By Derwent Press. The regular list price is $14.25. Sells new for $13.50. There are some available for $16.57.
Read more...

Purchase Information
No comments about UNLUCKY ALF.



Posted in Family and Childhood (Monday, September 8, 2008)

Written by Chris Johnson. By Authorhouse. Sells new for $13.95. There are some available for $9.05.
Read more...

Purchase Information
No comments about Movies, Memories, and Me.



Page 90 of 103
10  20  30  40  50  60  70  80  81  82  83  84  85  86  87  88  89  90  91  92  93  94  95  96  97  98  99  100  
The Captain and the Captives: An American Child Tries To Make Sense Out Of War
The Green Years (Isis Nonfiction)
Snowball: Go Find Yourself a School (Reminiscence)
Fifth Chinese Daughter
My Boyhood
Rory & Ita
WHERE THE ANGELS BOW TO THE GRASS: A BOY'S MEMOIR
Memories of a Depression Baby
UNLUCKY ALF
Movies, Memories, and Me

Copyright © 2005
*Amazon.com prices and availability subject to change.
Last updated: Mon Sep 8 07:03:04 EDT 2008