Biographies & Memoirs Books

Authors Books
1. Eat, Pray, Love: One Woman's Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia
2. Letter to My Daughter
3. Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life (P.S.)
4. The Wordy Shipmates
5. Nothing to Be Frightened Of
6. The Glass Castle: A Memoir
7. The Man Who Invented Christmas: How Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol Rescued His Career and Revived Our Holiday Spirits
8. Lincoln: The Biography of a Writer
9. On Writing
10. The World Is What It Is: The Authorized Biography of V. S. Naipaul

Author Jose M. deOlivares Interviewed at TheBookInsider.com About His Book "Bring Them Back Alive: Helping Teens Get out and Stay out of Trouble"
Jose M. deOlivares has spent the past forty years helping teenagers straighten out their lives. In 1985, he founded Streetwise, Inc., to provide technical assistance and training to staff and others working with difficult-to-serve youth. He currently helps to shape national youth policy as a regional director, U.S. Department of Labor, Employment, and Training Administration, Office of Job Corps.Visit Jose at http://www.bringthembackalive.net [PRWEB Jun 30, 2005]

Isn't There Enough Negativity In The World? Poetry Helps Bring Joy Into Life
According to recent surveys more Americans than ever before are disillusioned with the state of the country. Public support for the war in Iraq has deteriorated, the economy is on thin ice, and people say they feel no safer from terrorist attacks than they did four years ago. And in the aftermath of hurricane Katrina, experts predict that millions of people may suffer from a host of mental difficulties connected to the catastrophe. [PRWEB Oct 2, 2005]

Bibhu Mohapatra, Design Director of J Mendel Spotted in Cape Town
Mohapatra heads to Africa to find a new lawyer of inspiration for the next Mendel collection. [PRWEB Oct 10, 2005]

AlzheimerÂ’s and Dementia Experts Provide Broward Families Assessments for Eldercare
Experts in AlzheimerÂ’s and Dementia Provide Broward Families Assessments for Eldercare. [PRWEB Aug 19, 2005]





Books - Arts & Literature - Authors


View Book 'Eat, Pray, Love: One Woman's Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia'



Eat, Pray, Love: One Woman's Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia
Authors: Elizabeth Gilbert.
Paperback, 352 pages
Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics)
Publication Date: 2007-01-30


Reviews :

    This beautifully written, heartfelt memoir touched a nerve among both readers and reviewers. Elizabeth Gilbert tells how she made the difficult choice to leave behind all the trappings of modern American success (marriage, house in the country, career) and find, instead, what she truly wanted from life. Setting out for a year to study three different aspects of her nature amid three different cultures, Gilbert explored the art of pleasure in Italy and the art of devotion in India, and then a balance between the two on the Indonesian island of Bali. By turns rapturous and rueful, this wise and funny author (whom Booklist calls “Anne Lamott’s hip, yoga- practicing, footloose younger sister”) is poised to garner yet more adoring fans....



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View Book 'Letter to My Daughter'



Letter to My Daughter
Authors: Maya Angelou.
Hardcover, 192 pages
Publisher: Random House
Publication Date: 2008-09-23
Edition: 1

Reviews :

    For a world of devoted readers, a much-awaited new volume of absorbing stories and inspirational wisdom from one of our best-loved writers.

Dedicated to the daughter she never had but sees all around her, Letter to My Daughter reveals Maya Angelou’s path to living well and living a life with meaning. Told in her own inimitable style, this book transcends genres and categories: guidebook, memoir, poetry, and pure delight.

Here in short spellbinding essays are glimpses of the tumultuous life that led Angelou to an exalted place in American letters and taught her lessons in compassion and fortitude: how she was brought up by her indomitable grandmother in segregated Arkansas, taken in at thirteen by her more worldly and less religious mother, and grew to be an awkward, six-foot-tall teenager whose first experience of loveless sex paradoxically left her with her greatest gift, a son.

Whether she is recalling such lost friends as Coretta Scott King and Ossie Davis, extolling honesty, decrying vulgarity, explaining why becoming a Christian is a “lifelong endeavor,” or simply singing the praises of a meal of red rice–Maya Angelou writes from the heart to millions of women she considers her extended family.

Like the rest of her remarkable work, Letter to My Daughter entertains and teaches; it is a book to cherish, savor, re-read, and share.




“I gave birth to one child, a son, but I have thousands of daughters. You are Black and White, Jewish and Muslim, Asian, Spanish speaking, Native Americans and Aleut. You are fat and thin and pretty and plain, gay and straight, educated and unlettered, and I am speaking to you all. Here is my offering to you.”

–from Letter to My Daughter...



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View Book 'Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life (P.S.)'



Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life (P.S.)
Authors: Barbara Kingsolver. Camille Kingsolver. Steven L. Hopp.
Paperback, 400 pages
Publisher: Harper Perennial
Publication Date: 2008-05-01


Reviews :

   

Author Barbara Kingsolver and her family abandoned the industrial-food pipeline to live a rural life—vowing that, for one year, they’d only buy food raised in their own neighborhood, grow it themselves, or learn to live without it. Part memoir, part journalistic investigation, Animal, Vegetable, Miracle is an enthralling narrative that will open your eyes in a hundred new ways to an old truth: You are what you eat.

...



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View Book 'The Wordy Shipmates'



The Wordy Shipmates
Authors: Sarah Vowell.
Hardcover, 272 pages
Publisher: Riverhead Hardcover
Publication Date: 2008-10-07


Reviews :

    The Wordy Shipmates is New York Times–bestselling author Sarah Vowell’s exploration of the Puritans and their journey to America to become the people of John Winthrop’s “city upon a hill”—a shining example, a “city that cannot be hid.”

To this day, America views itself as a Puritan nation, but Vowell investigates what that means— and what it should mean. What was this great political enterprise all about? Who were these people who are considered the philosophical, spiritual, and moral ancestors of our nation? What Vowell discovers is something far different from what their uptight shoe-buckles-and- corn reputation might suggest. The people she finds are highly literate, deeply principled, and surprisingly feisty. Their story is filled with pamphlet feuds, witty courtroom dramas, and bloody vengeance. Along the way she asks:

* Was Massachusetts Bay Colony governor John Winthrop a communitarian, a Christlike Christian, or conformity’s tyrannical enforcer? Answer: Yes!
* Was Rhode Island’s architect, Roger Williams, America’s founding freak or the father of the First Amendment? Same difference.
* What does it take to get that jezebel Anne Hutchinson to shut up? A hatchet.
* What was the Puritans’ pet name for the Pope? The Great Whore of Babylon.

Sarah Vowell’s special brand of armchair history makes the bizarre and esoteric fascinatingly relevant and fun. She takes us from the modern-day reenactment of an Indian massacre to the Mohegan Sun casino, from old-timey Puritan poetry, where “righteousness” is rhymed with “wilderness,” to a Mayflower-themed waterslide. Throughout, The Wordy Shipmates is rich in historical fact, humorous insight, and social commentary by one of America’s most celebrated voices. Thou shalt enjoy it....



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View Book 'Nothing to Be Frightened Of'



Nothing to Be Frightened Of
Authors: Julian Barnes.
Hardcover, 256 pages
Publisher: Knopf
Publication Date: 2008-09-02


Reviews :

   

Two years after the best-selling Arthur & George, Julian Barnes gives us a memoir on mortality that touches on faith and science and family as well as a rich array of exemplary figures who over the centuries have confronted the same questions he now poses about the most basic fact of life: its inevitable extinction.

If the fear of death is “the most rational thing in the world,” how does one contend with it? An atheist at twenty, an agnostic at sixty, Barnes looks into the various arguments for and against and with God, and at the bloodline whose archivist, following his parents’ death, he has become—another realm of mystery, wherein a drawer of mementos and his own memories (not to mention those of his philosopher brother) often fail to connect. There are other ancestors, too: the writers—“most of them dead, and quite a few of them French”—who are his daily companions, supplemented by composers and theologians and scientists whose similar explorations are woven into this account with an exhilarating breadth of intellect and felicity of spirit.

Deadly serious, masterfully playful, and surprisingly hilarious, Nothing to Be Frightened Of is a riveting display of how this supremely gifted writer goes about his business and a highly personal tour of the human condition and what might follow the final diagnosis.

...



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Short News
RMCWR Offers Weekend Writing Retreat September 22-25, 2005
Writers invited to escape to the beautiful Fraser Valley in Colorado to focus on and improve their craft. [PRWEB Aug 16, 2005]

AMD Alliance International And OcuSource.com Partner in Global AMD Education Event
OcuSsource.com and AMD Alliance International joined forces today to announce the AMD Awareness Conference on Sept. 22-24, 2005. The all-online conference will be held during AMD Week – Sept. 19-25, 2005, and will focus entirely on age related macular degeneration, (AMD) the most common cause of vision loss in the developed world. The event allows consumers and industry professionals to participate in high quality information and education offered through an online conferenc

 


View Book 'The Glass Castle: A Memoir'



The Glass Castle: A Memoir
Authors: Jeannette Walls.
Paperback, 288 pages
Publisher: Scribner
Publication Date: 2006-01-09


Reviews :

    Jeannette Walls grew up with parents whose ideals and stubborn nonconformity were both their curse and their salvation. Rex and Rose Mary Walls had four children. In the beginning, they lived like nomads, moving among Southwest desert towns, camping in the mountains. Rex was a charismatic, brilliant man who, when sober, captured his children's imagination, teaching them physics, geology, and above all, how to embrace life fearlessly. Rose Mary, who painted and wrote and couldn't stand the responsibility of providing for her family, called herself an "excitement addict." Cooking a meal that would be consumed in fifteen minutes had no appeal when she could make a painting that might last forever.

Later, when the money ran out, or the romance of the wandering life faded, the Walls retreated to the dismal West Virginia mining town -- and the family -- Rex Walls had done everything he could to escape. He drank. He stole the grocery money and disappeared for days. As the dysfunction of the family escalated, Jeannette and her brother and sisters had to fend for themselves, supporting one another as they weathered their parents' betrayals and, finally, found the resources and will to leave home.

What is so astonishing about Jeannette Walls is not just that she had the guts and tenacity and intelligence to get out, but that she describes her parents with such deep affection and generosity. Hers is a story of triumph against all odds, but also a tender, moving tale of unconditional love in a family that despite its profound flaws gave her the fiery determination to carve out a successful life on her own terms.

For two decades, Jeannette Walls hid her roots. Now she tells her own story. A regular contributor to MSNBC.com, she lives in New York and Long Island and is married to the writer John Taylor....

    Jeannette Walls's father always called her "Mountain Goat" and there's perhaps no more apt nickname for a girl who navigated a sheer and towering cliff of childhood both daily and stoically. In The Glass Castle, Walls chronicles her upbringing at the hands of eccentric, nomadic parents--Rose Mary, her frustrated-artist mother, and Rex, her brilliant, alcoholic father. To call the elder Walls's childrearing style laissez faire would be putting it mildly. As Rose Mary and Rex, motivated by whims and paranoia, uprooted their kids time and again, the youngsters (Walls, her brother and two sisters) were left largely to their own devices. But while Rex and Rose Mary firmly believed children learned best from their own mistakes, they themselves never seemed to do so, repeating the same disastrous patterns that eventually landed them on the streets. Walls describes in fascinating detail what it was to be a child in this family, from the embarrassing (wearing shoes held together with safety pins; using markers to color her skin in an effort to camouflage holes in her pants) to the horrific (being told, after a creepy uncle pleasured himself in close proximity, that sexual assault is a crime of perception; and being pimped by her father at a bar). Though Walls has well earned the right to complain, at no point does she play the victim. In fact, Walls' removed, nonjudgmental stance is initially startling, since many of the circumstances she describes could be categorized as abusive (and unquestioningly neglectful). But on the contrary, Walls respects her parents' knack for making hardships feel like adventures, and her love for them--despite their overwhelming self-absorption--resonates from cover to cover. --Brangien Davis...



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View Book 'The Man Who Invented Christmas: How Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol Rescued His Career and Revived Our Holiday Spirits'



The Man Who Invented Christmas: How Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol Rescued His Career and Revived Our Holiday Spirits
Authors: Les Standiford.
Hardcover, 256 pages
Publisher: Crown
Publication Date: 2008-11-04


Reviews :

    As uplifting as the tale of Scrooge itself, this is the story of how one writer and one book revived the signal holiday of the Western world.

Just before Christmas in 1843, a debt-ridden and dispirited Charles Dickens wrote a small book he hoped would keep his creditors at bay. His publisher turned it down, so Dickens used what little money he had to put out A Christmas Carol himself. He worried it might be the end of his career as a novelist.

The book immediately caused a sensation. And it breathed new life into a holiday that had fallen into disfavor, undermined by lingering Puritanism and the cold modernity of the Industrial Revolution. It was a harsh and dreary age, in desperate need of spiritual renewal, ready to embrace a book that ended with blessings for one and all.

With warmth, wit, and an infusion of Christmas cheer, Les Standiford whisks us back to Victorian England, its most beloved storyteller, and the birth of the Christmas we know best. The Man Who Invented Christmas is a rich and satisfying read for Scrooges and sentimentalists alike....



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View Book 'Lincoln: The Biography of a Writer'



Lincoln: The Biography of a Writer
Authors: Fred Kaplan.
Hardcover, 416 pages
Publisher: Harper
Publication Date: 2008-11-01


Reviews :

   

For Abraham Lincoln, whether he was composing love letters, speeches, or legal arguments, words mattered. In Lincoln, acclaimed biographer Fred Kaplan explores the life of America's sixteenth president through his use of language as a vehicle both to express complex ideas and feelings and as an instrument of persuasion and empowerment. Like the other great canonical writers of American literature—a status he is gradually attaining—Lincoln had a literary career that is inseparable from his life story. An admirer and avid reader of Burns, Byron, Shakespeare, and the Old Testament, Lincoln was the most literary of our presidents. His views on love, liberty, and human nature were shaped by his reading and knowledge of literature.

Since Lincoln, no president has written his own words and addressed his audience with equal and enduring effectiveness. Kaplan focuses on the elements that shaped Lincoln's mental and imaginative world; how his writings molded his identity, relationships, and career; and how they simultaneously generated both the distinctive political figure he became and the public discourse of the nation. This unique account of Lincoln's life and career highlights the shortcomings of the modern presidency, reminding us, through Lincoln's legacy and appreciation for language, that the careful and honest use of words is a necessity for successful democracy.

Illuminating and engrossing, Lincoln brilliantly chronicles Abraham Lincoln's genius with language.

...



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View Book 'On Writing'



On Writing
Authors: Stephen King.
Mass Market Paperback, 320 pages
Publisher: Pocket
Publication Date: 2002-07-01


Reviews :

   

"Long live the King" hailed Entertainment Weekly upon the publication of Stephen King's On Writing. Part memoir, part master class by one of the bestselling authors of all time, this superb volume is a revealing and practical view of the writer's craft, comprising the basic tools of the trade every writer must have. King's advice is grounded in his vivid memories from childhood through his emergence as a writer, from his struggling early career to his widely reported near-fatal accident in 1999 -- and how the inextricable link between writing and living spurred his recovery. Brilliantly structured, friendly and inspiring, On Writing will empower and entertain everyone who reads it -- fans, writers, and anyone who loves a great story well told....

    Short and snappy as it is, Stephen King's On Writing really contains two books: a fondly sardonic autobiography and a tough-love lesson for aspiring novelists. The memoir is terrific stuff, a vivid description of how a writer grew out of a misbehaving kid. You're right there with the young author as he's tormented by poison ivy, gas-passing babysitters, uptight schoolmarms, and a laundry job nastier than Jack London's. It's a ripping yarn that casts a sharp light on his fiction. This was a child who dug Yvette Vickers from Attack of the Giant Leeches, not Sandra Dee. "I wanted monsters that ate whole cities, radioactive corpses that came out of the ocean and ate surfers, and girls in black bras who looked like trailer trash." But massive reading on all literary levels was a craving just as crucial, and soon King was the published author of "I Was a Teen-Age Graverobber." As a young adult raising a family in a trailer, King started a story inspired by his stint as a janitor cleaning a high-school girls locker room. He crumpled it up, but his writer wife retrieved it from the trash, and using her advice about the girl milieu and his own memories of two reviled teenage classmates who died young, he came up with Carrie. King gives us lots of revelations about his life and work. The kidnapper character in Misery, the mind-possessing monsters in The Tommyknockers, and the haunting of the blocked writer in The Shining symbolized his cocaine and booze addiction (overcome thanks to his wife's intervention, which he describes). "There's one novel, Cujo, that I barely remember writing."

King also evokes his college days and his recovery from the van crash that nearly killed him, but the focus is always on what it all means to the craft. He gives you a whole writer's "tool kit": a reading list, writing assignments, a corrected story, and nuts-and-bolts advice on dollars and cents, plot and character, the basic building block of the paragraph, and literary models. He shows what you can learn from H.P. Lovecraft's arcane vocabulary, Hemingway's leanness, Grisham's authenticity, Richard Dooling's artful obscenity, Jonathan Kellerman's sentence fragments. He explains why Hart's War is a great story marred by a tin ear for dialogue, and how Elmore Leonard's Be Cool could be the antidote.

King isn't just a writer, he's a true teacher. --Tim Appelo ...



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View Book 'The World Is What It Is: The Authorized Biography of V. S. Naipaul'



The World Is What It Is: The Authorized Biography of V. S. Naipaul
Authors: Patrick French.
Hardcover, 576 pages
Publisher: Knopf
Publication Date: 2008-11-04


Reviews :

   

Since V. S. Naipaul left his Caribbean birthplace at the age of seventeen, his improbable life has followed the global movement of peoples, whose preeminent literary chronicler he has become. In The World Is What It Is, Patrick French offers the first authoritative biography of the controversial Nobel laureate, whose only stated ambition was greatness as a writer, in pursuit of which goal nothing else was sacred.

Beginning with a richly detailed portrait of Naipaul’s childhood in colonial Trinidad, French gives us the boy born to an Indian family, the displaced soul in a displaced community, who by dint of talent and ambition finds the only imaginable way out: a scholarship to Oxford. London in the 1950s offers hope and his first literary success, but homesickness and depression almost defeat Vidia, his narrow escape aided by Patricia Hale, an Englishwoman who will devote herself to his work and well-being. She will stand by him, sometimes tenuously, for more than four decades, even as Naipaul embarks on a twenty-four-year affair, which will awaken half-dead passions and feed perhaps his greatest wave of dizzying creativity. Amid this harrowing emotional life, French traces the course of the fierce visionary impulse underlying Naipaul’s singular power, a gift to produce masterpieces of fiction and nonfiction.

Informed by exclusive access to V. S. Naipaul’s private papers and personal recollections, and by great feeling for his formidable body of work, French’s revelatory biography does full justice to an enigmatic genius.

...



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Biographies & Memoirs News
ProDance Showcase 2005 is open to the public
For the first time ever, the public can be a part of the amazing ProDance Showcase, Live August 3, 2005 at the James L. Knight Center, Miami, Florida. [PRWEB Jul 2, 2005]

World Renowned Motivational Speaker Steve Edwards Launches his New "Miracles Are Possible" Seminar and Workshop series for groups and individuals
Known for his energizing abilities and inspirational techniques, Steve Edwards offers more teachings of passion and motivation to all. [PRWEB Oct 6, 2005]

New Orleans Makeup Artist Needs Any Media Work While She Rebuilds Her Makeup Studio
New Orleans Makeup Artist Brandy Gomez-Duplessis is looking for Any Freelance Assignments with Magazines, Music Artist, Fashion Shows and many more so she can keep working while she rebuilds her makeup studio that was damaged by Hurricane Katrina. [PRWEB Oct 12, 2005]

 

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