Harris-Stowe Books


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Harris-Stowe
The Right Choice: The Incredible Failure of Public Education and the Rising Hope of Home Schooling
Published in Paperback by Noble Publishing Associates (1992-11)
Authors: Christopher J. Klicka and Gregg Harris
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Unmatchable Results
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-28
This book shows the unmatchable results of homeschooling. Homeschooling by far produces the best results at the lowest costs. Most people are unaware of the financial consequences resulting from the moral crisis in the public education. As public education students move into business, their lack of value for honesty and understanding of 'right from wrong' is putting entire economy at risk. Here is a great ebook that I found about how to Save Money Homeschooling. http://www.SaveMoneyHomeschooling.com

Fabulous book, Extremely helpful
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-10
I loved this book, and gave copies to the grandparents to read. It was pleasant, easy reading from a Christian point-of-view (which I loved). I was absolutely shocked to discover all that is going on in the public schools today. Thanks be to God that my two children will never see the inside of one.

This book will open your eyes - big time - to the public school system. It's absolutely a must-read for anyone even considering sending their children to public school.

It is also a great book for doubters (grandparents, spouses, friends...). I wish I could hand this book out to people everywhere I go. People need to see what is happening in our public schools before blindly sending their children there.

Another excellent book for grandparents who are having a tough time with the homeschool decision is: "You're Going To Do WHAT?!" by Laurajean Downs. I loved this book, and it's perfect. There is an updated version with a 2000 or 2001 copyright date, so I'd get that one.

:) Blessings to all!

There are better homeschool books
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-09
I just spent several minutes paging through this book to find out which States worked on the "Honor System" for homeschool parents. I knew I had read about it somewhere in THE RIGHT CHOICE but without an index I never found an answer my question. That experience was typical of the troubles I found with this book. Overall it was a hard book to follow because its thrust was American public schools vs homeschooling not any classroom education vs homeschooling. It included very little about the nuts and bolts of homeschooling and what advice it did include was strange. For instance, on Page 208 it says "If you have only one child, you should have a few more if at all possible."

Also, THE RIGHT CHOICE was so full of advertisements for the author's legal services that his point of view was compromised.

excellent technical resource for homeschoolers
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1998-01-01
This book is an excellent resource for parents contemplating homeschooling. Many legal cases are referenced. Those of us sans law degree may find this tedious. Mr. Klicka does present an empassioned case in favor of home education though. You will refer to this volume over and over again.

A turning point book for those still undecided
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-30
Since I have been homeschooling for four years, some of the last chapters in the book we not new information for me, but the facts in the first section of the book really opened my eyes to what is going on in the public school system. I consider this book to be an excellent one to read for those who are still undecided about whether to homeschool or not. It's written by a man who knows what he's talking about - an homeschooling father and a homeschooling lawyer. I highly recommend it.

Harris-Stowe
The Minister's Wooing (Penguin Classics)
Published in Paperback by Penguin Classics (1999-08-01)
Author: Harriet Beecher Stowe
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Not a Bad Summer Reading Choice
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-05
I read this novel for the purpose of completeing a summer assignment for my AP US history Class. It had a decnet plotline and is by the obviously reputable Stowe. A very interesting historical novel that kept me entertained enough to finish and wirte a paper about. Focuses on slavery in new england and the love between a minister and the daughter of the woman with whom he is residing.

The Agony of Salvation and a Theology of Love
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-24
The Minister's Wooing is the first of Harriet Beecher Stowe's three great novels of New England religion, that weave scenes and folklore of New England life with the debates and religious agonies that led her from her father's Edwardsian revivalist Calvinism to evangelical Episcopalianism. Of the three, The Minister's Wooing is the most satisfying as a story, although Oldtown Folks and Poganuc People give a fuller panorama of old New England life. (David Hackett Fischer used them extensively in his social history of the American colonies, Albion's Seed.) Mrs. Stowe improved her style greatly after Uncle Tom's Cabin which, while powerful as a moral indictment of slavery, is rather poorly written in many passages.

In her New England novels, Mrs. Stowe looks back on her childhood world in Puritan New England, justifying both her desertion of some of its most tightly-held tenets and the high honor she continued to pay to its legacy. To claim that she satirizes Calvinism is a grotesque misreading, sadly typical of most introductions to her novels which desire to place her as a forbearer of secular feminism and social radicalism, rather than let her be what in fact she was, an evangelical, a Republican, and an ardent advocate of the Christianization of American society.

The Minister's Wooing is set around 1798-1800 in Newport, Rhode Island, at a time just after the American Revolution. Real historical characters in the novel include Samuel Hopkins and Aaron Burr, Jr., leading pupil and grandson, respectively, of the great theologian Jonathan Edwards. While the author freely changes events in these characters' lives (Hopkins, for example, had been a foe of slavery and the slave-trade since 1776, long before the novel's time), her interpretation of these characters, both of whom she had met growing up, is insightful.

Mrs. Stowe contrasts the culturally spare and logocentric world of early New England with the visual opulence which she inhabited in genteel America of the mid-nineteenth century. How to relate the insular New England Christianity of her childhood to the Christianity of Raphael, and the great cathedrals of Europe she visited as an adult? This theme is introduced both in her narrative voice (St. Augustine's Enchiridion of Faith, Love, and Hope is cited without name at the novel's turning point) and in the character of Mme de Frontignac, a French aristocratic woman in an unhappy marriage. She introduces the New England matrons to the feminine beauty of France yet finds balm for her wounds in the severe virtues of Protestant New England. Clothe the chaste Protestant New England spirit in a elegant French Catholic gentility, Mrs. Stowe seems to be saying.

The theological groundwork is made more explicit in Oldtown Folks, but briefly, Mrs. Stowe believed that Jonathan Edwards, with his impossibly high standards for Christian life and his revivalist focus on a dramatic conversion experience, knocked the motherly old Puritan consensus exemplified by Cotton Mather's Magnalia Christi Americana off kilter and created almost unbearable tensions in many New Englanders. Who can be saved? What was the use of anything in a world where only an infinitesimal number could escape hell? How can we bear the thought of loving God who seems to condemn so many of our own flesh and blood to eternal damnation? Wrestling with these questions paradoxically gave the Yankees energy as they burst their cocoon, trading in China, fighting the Revolution, and allying with France. Some, like Aaron Burr, Jr., responded by embracing the skepticism of the philosophes. Others like James Marvyn's mother slowly expire, tormented by antinomies they can't resolve and unable to find the Gospel of Christ's love in the mazes of predestination. Some, like the deliciously nasty Simeon Brown, use the logical intricacies of Calvinist theology to cover up their utterly unconverted heart.

Mrs. Stowe's own answer is given in part by the exemplary character of Mary Scudder (whose role is taken by Harry Percival in Oldtown Folks), and in part by the Gospel wisdom of the black slave Candace. Mrs. Stowe's answer seems contradictory: in Mary Scudder she says children raised in a truly Christian society (as New England was and America must be) are born not depraved but naturally Christian and saved. In Candace, however, she points to the harder but more believable good news that Christ died for and loves even real sinners. Tragically Mrs. Stowe, like New England theologians generally, ingnored Holy Baptism as God's objective Gospel sign showing His good will toward the little children. Thus she ironically sought comfort and assurance through the image of Mary Scudder in the same impossible ideal of purely holy living that in Jonathan Edwards' hands had begun the madness.

Finally, Mrs. Stowe recasts the theological question of grace and nature into a meditation on the relation between familial (romantic, filial, and parental) love and love of God. Despite her sympathies with Catholicism, Mrs. Stowe firmly sets aside the monastic ideal that sees family love as in competition with love of God. Instead she sees the former as the true stepping stone to the latter. God planted in our hearts this bond of love to our families, even for those who we fear are rejecting Him, because it is this human love that leads us to Him. For Mrs. Stowe, the Christian home is truly God's school of character; desecration of that school is veritable blasphemy.

If all this sounds rather too thoughtful and theological, this is, as Mrs. Stowe states, the problem with old New England. It was born and conceived in theology and a novel true to that ethos must itself be thoughtful and theological. There is humor here, sudden plot turns, pathos, shrewd observation of character, and lovely description of North American nature, but the heart of the novel is a theology of love, divine and human.

An underrated book by Stowe, Overshadowed by Uncle Tom
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-07
I had to read this book for a Neglected Novels of the 19th century class. Stowe's examination into the problems of calvinism and the role of women in American society are insightful. Stowe's prose is entertianing and clear, but can be a bit droning, especially if the reader isn't acquainted with the style of 19th century novels. Overall I'd recomend this book to anyone who enjoys 19th century Lit.

Harris-Stowe
ECCLESIASTICAL LAW AND RULES OF EVIDENCE, WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TOTHE JURISPRUDENCE OF THE METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Published in Hardcover by Cranston & Stowe (1886)
Author: William J. And William L. Harris Henry
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Harris-Stowe
Encore Magazine, November 1945, Volume VIII, Number 45
Published in Paperback by Encore Press (1945)
Authors: Frank Harris, Rainer Maria Rilke Oscar Wilde, Joshua Slocum, George F. Willison Oliver Goldsmith, Gustav Eckstein, Wilkie Collins A.J. Liebling, William James, Harold E. Stearns, Cmdr. S. Dana Greene, John Collier, Paul Morand, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and Leonid N. Andreiev
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Harris-Stowe
Family line of Colonel John Seabury, Stowe, Vermont
Published in Unknown Binding by J.A. Mansor (1931)
Author: J. A Mansor
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Harris-Stowe
The Minister's Wooing (Penguin Classics)
Published in Paperback by NY (1980)
Author: Susan K. Harris Harriet Beecher Stowe
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Harris-Stowe
Stowe Teachers College and her predecessors,
Published in Unknown Binding by Christopher Pub. House (1967)
Author: Ruth Miriam Harris
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Books-Under-Review-->Reference-->Education-->Colleges and Universities-->North America-->United States-->Missouri-->Missouri State Colleges and Universities-->Harris-Stowe
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