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LARGE PRINT BOOKS
Posted in Large Print (Saturday, September 6, 2008)
Written by Sallyann J. Murphey. By MacMillan Publishing Company..
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5 comments about Bean Blossom Dreams: A City Family's Search for a Simple Country Life (Thorndike Press Large Print Paperback Series).
- I grew up in the country, so I knew Sallyann was in trouble when she named her turkeys! LOL I really did enjoy this book. I now live in the "big city" (Atlanta), and often dream of doing what the Murphey's did. I hope that if I ever get the chance, I will have neighbors as great as theirs. This is a wonderful book to read.
- Isn't quitting your boring 9 to 5 office job, moving to the country and living a quieter, humbler existence, everyone's secret dream? Well it has always been one of mine, and reading this book was absolutely a treat for me. In addition to thouroughly enjoying every page of this story, I actually learned many things from this book and was delighted to find that Sallyann included her recipes and tips from the story in the back of the book (although it did mean that the book ended too soon). I was especially dying to know the recipe for her Gorganzola and Leek Soup, and now I can't wait to try it out. I will fondly remember the Murphey's story as I try out her many wonderful recipes. I look forward to her next book, and hopefully a sequel to this story is in her plans.
- My daughter picked this book up from a garage sale for fifty cents and left it in the "reading room" in our modest house in a modest city in the modest midwest. Growing up on a farm and being raised in a climate where work was expected and birth/life/death were daily events and where weather determined how many presents would be under the Christmas tree, and as well, how much canning would be done in the fall from the family garden, I hold little respect from someone who makes light of being an organic farmer and makes "potpourri" from rose petals.
I realize it's been 10 years or so since Ms. Murphey wrote her book, but I would likely enjoy reading or listening to what she has to say today. Yes, neighbors were family and we lived and breathed next to them. The vet was next to God and God was next to the dinner table every single night when my Dad said Grace. A life on the farm is not romantic when there is no other livelihood. Too bad most people don't recognize this.
I spent just today working on tearing down an old chicken coop at my folks place. The mouse dirt, the years of chicken filth and the constant wind out on the prairie are NOT romantic and not to be trifled with.
This book goes to the next grange sale fund raiser.
- Well, geez, the previous reviewer was a little harsh. I don't think Ms. Murphey glamorized or made light of the serious work she had to do on the farm. Rather, I thought she did a great job of showing how difficult it really is. I enjoyed the book and thought it was very touching.
- Hi, this is Charley Murphey - the daughter :) I may be nearly twenty now and heading toward my sophomore year in college, but I remember those years which Bean Blossom Dreams so aptly describes better than I remember the past five and I can tell you completely honestly that we were never once arrogant about our ability as farmers. I can only remember my mom's infamous enthusiasm at work, her total and complete optimism and hope that we could really have a farm. We have since eased off of that - especially when my mom became deathly allergic to bee stings and we had to completely change our expectations of the garden - but my father is starting a new business producing organic plant food and I've been learning all I can about gardening to help out my mother. I'm sorry that there are those who feel that farm work is not something to be celebrated the way we do, but one thing I can tell you for sure is that we were not glamourizing our life here, or trying to pass ourselves off as great farmers. I know what real farmwork is, I've seen it at home and at the farms of our friends - and I know I'm not cut out for it. But having humor and joy for something that is underappreciated as a profession and way of life is not making a mockery of it - it is simply making it real and something people can smile about and relate to on the smaller level we were working at, so that they would understand and appreciate what we were trying to accomplish. This farm means more to me than anywhere else in the world. The things my mother and father gave to me by coming here, by trying so hard, by having the grace to giggle at themselves when they made mistakes - is priceless. I will never forget what they did for me/us and I will be a part of this farm - as well as try to make it a part of my children someday - forever.
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Posted in Large Print (Saturday, September 6, 2008)
Written by Anne Edwards. By Ulverscroft Large Print.
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No comments about The Grimaldis of Monaco/Large Print (Charnwood Large Print Library Series).
Posted in Large Print (Saturday, September 6, 2008)
Written by Gregory Holyoake. By ISIS Large Print Books.
Sells new for $32.50.
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No comments about The Prefab Kid: A Postwar Childhood in Kent (Reminiscence).
Posted in Large Print (Saturday, September 6, 2008)
Written by Hazel Wheeler. By Ulverscroft Large Print.
Sells new for $21.99.
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No comments about Half a Pound of Tuppenny Rice (Reminiscence).
Posted in Large Print (Saturday, September 6, 2008)
Written by Samuel Butler. By ReadHowYouWant.com.
Sells new for $15.49.
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No comments about The Way of All Flesh Volume I [EasyRead Large Edition].
Posted in Large Print (Saturday, September 6, 2008)
Written by Lesley Lewis. By ISIS Large Print Books.
The regular list price is $24.95.
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No comments about The Private Life of a Country House 1912-1939 (Transaction Large Print Books).
Posted in Large Print (Saturday, September 6, 2008)
Written by Susanna Kaysen. By Thorndike Press.
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5 comments about Girl, Interrupted.
- Usually books are much better than the movie . In this case its the other way round . The book while interesting- is flat . The movie actually has much more going for it .
- Having PTSD myself from Wars and other things, I thought this was a great movie! I didn't read the book first however and normally I do but from what I gather the movie in this instance was much better than the book...
I have read One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest and in many ways this reminded me of that, only in the setting of a female dominated one vice a male one....
Maybe in the future if time permits I will read the book itself to see if the movie which I have already seen and truly thought was great stacks up...
If not...
It was that book which inspired the movie and it's a great movie...
And mental illness isn't just something that people are born with, some times they receive it through traumatic experiences such as tragedies or war or the like...
In my opinion it is something that really needs to be given far more attention than it is receiving and this movie sheds light on it like few have...
Your Chance to Hear The Last Panther Speak
- Susanna Kaysen shares an episodic account of her two-year stay in a mental institution during her late teens. She recounts the ailments and behavior which led her to the hospital, while also questioning her diagnosis of Borderline Personality Disorder, as well as the manner in which mental illnesses are treated. In order to portray her experience and the experiences of the other young women she encountered within the institution accurately, Kaysen recounts a variety of occurrences, ranging from the grim to the lighthearted. Among Kaysen's recollections are one girl's experience with shock therapy, her own attempt to bite into her hand to ensure that she is "real," and the girls' humorous outing to an ice cream shop.
Copies of Kaysen's medical records are juxtaposed against her personal accounts, often making the tone of the former documents unsettlingly cold and detached. Her personal account is often moving, and even the logic Kaysen uses to explain some of her most unusual behavior can make sense. At the same time, she strives for a relatively objective account of her interaction with mental health professionals. Kaysen presents a strong case to support her belief that the line between "normalcy" and mental illness is often muddied,--a thought she summarizes beautifully at the beginning of the book, writing that "Every window in Alcatraz has a view of San Francisco"-- without becoming overly critical of those who diagnosed and treated her.
- On the first page of her novel(?), Susanna Kaysen says she had to live for two years in a "parallel universe" when she became a patient in a psychiatric hospital. In the chapter "Elementary Topography," she poses a question, how did I get to be in here?
The answer she gives, other than her being delusional, is that she was in a "state of contrariety." She goes on, "All of my integrity seemed to lie in saying No."
Two other chapters bear witness to the adversarial character of her illness, "Velocity vs. Viscosity," which deals with her obsessive thought patterns, and "Mind vs. Brain:"
"Whatever we call it--mind, character, soul--we like to think it possesses something that is greater than the sum of its neurons, and that 'animates' us."
In yet another chapter, Kaysen derides her former therapist, who was named "Melvin," and who was to become her analyst. She acts like she tolerated him as someone imposed on her, and says that she "felt sorry for him" on account of his funny name. In an internal memo, however, a nurse reported that she experienced extreme anxiety over her therapist being absent.
Part of Kaysen's "state of contrariety," then, must be seen in the light of an abject, back-against-the-wall helplessness caused by the mental illness. I pity Kaysen for her interrupted life. Her novel makes a compelling case for mental-illness research.
In the Charleston County Library, >Girl, Interrupted< is located in the "Young Adult Fiction" section, which is inappropriate for such a rough, lurid story.
- This was...senseless jibberjaw..Truly that is the only word that comes to mind. The movie was wonderful, but I can see now that it was very loosely based on this book.. It took a few characters and added on to their personalities.. the book was mostly just rambling and opinions. Half of the interesting things that occured in the movie were not in this book. Those that love the movie will be greatly disapointed in this. I would also like to add, you will have in completely read in one or two sittings.
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Posted in Large Print (Saturday, September 6, 2008)
Written by John F. Runciman. By BiblioBazaar.
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No comments about Richard Wagner (Large Print Edition): Composer of Operas.
Posted in Large Print (Saturday, September 6, 2008)
Written by Lillian Beckwith. By Ulverscroft Large Print Books.
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1 comments about Beautiful Just!.
- I devour Lillian Beckwith books. They are so low-key and humorous--and worth reading again and again. How she ever found the wonderful characters of Bruach I don't know. I notice her books have been republished. May a new generation discover their delightful characters and life in the Hebrides in the 1940s.
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Posted in Large Print (Saturday, September 6, 2008)
Written by Nuala O'Faolain. By Large Print Press.
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No comments about The Story of Chicago May.
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Bean Blossom Dreams: A City Family's Search for a Simple Country Life (Thorndike Press Large Print Paperback Series)
The Grimaldis of Monaco/Large Print (Charnwood Large Print Library Series)
The Prefab Kid: A Postwar Childhood in Kent (Reminiscence)
Half a Pound of Tuppenny Rice (Reminiscence)
The Way of All Flesh Volume I [EasyRead Large Edition]
The Private Life of a Country House 1912-1939 (Transaction Large Print Books)
Girl, Interrupted
Richard Wagner (Large Print Edition): Composer of Operas
Beautiful Just!
The Story of Chicago May
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