Georgia Books
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Abkhazia - IndependentReview Date: 2006-07-28

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Excellent information on how stress affects womenReview Date: 2001-08-03
This 303-page book has an index, a bibliography and a list of useful websites pertaining to stress.
Dr. Witkin begins by explaining what stress is in general, discusses in detail the Four D's of the Female Stress Syndrome (disorganization, decision-making difficulties, dependency fantasies, and depression), then provides an excellent overview of the results of the female stress syndrome in these areas of women's lives: (1) Fatigue and weight gain. Long-term stress can cause higher insulin levels, which can lead to fatigue, a craving for caffeine and sugar, and greater storage of body fat. (2) PMS. Premenstrual syndrome symptoms are made worse by stress and PMS can also cause stress. (3) Childbearing. Pregnancy affects the predictability of your life, no matter how wanted the baby is. This can cause stress, as can "fear and unrealistic expectations." (4) New mothers. Lack of an adequate support system to help with a newborn, postpartum depression, and the "loss of freedom, mobility and choice" all can "cause mixed feelings about parenting and its responsibilities," which leads to a lot of stress. (5) Menopause. This major physical transition often intersects with equally major life changes, such as children leaving home, aging parents losing their health, and so forth; all of which can lead to stress. (6) Anorexia nervosa, bulimia and irritable bowel syndrome. These syndromes are much more common in women than men and are strongly stress-related. (7) Depression. This mood disorder is a helpless-hopeless state and is twice as common in women as men. Many women respond to stress by becoming depressed. This may be because women are socialized to be helpless, which makes them less likely than men to take charge and change the things in their lives that are causing the stress which has triggered depression. (8) Smoking. Ironically, while many people perceive smoking as lessening anxiety, it actually causes stress due to mini-withdrawal symptoms that happen between cigarettes. (9) Headaches. Women more frequently respond to stress with headaches than men. Many women find that unexpressed anger, sexual needs and dependency issues can create conflicts that activate headaches. (10) Amenorrhea. Stress is one of the most frequent causes of delayed onset of menstruation in young women. (11) Sexual Dysfunction. Female sexual problems are often brought on or made worse by stress. (12) Anxiety. Stress can trigger anxiety and panic attacks.
The last part of the book covers recommended aids for reducing stress, including: giving yourself permission to try and reduce the stress in your life; learning to say no; giving yourself freedom to change your mind; laughter; expecting the best; exercise; relaxation; bibliotherapy (reading self-help books for insight); nurturing yourself; prioritizing the demands on your time; avoiding recreating old, dysfunctional scenarios again and again in your life.
The information in this book on female stress is invaluable for women of all ages. In addition, its sections on the effects of stress on children and men can help women understand how stress harms their loved ones. I highly recommend this book to women who are just starting to educate themselves on stress, as well as to those who have already read a lot about stress in general but are not familiar with how stress specifically affects women's health.

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Must have for any reference collectionReview Date: 2007-09-09
The information on all the different natural communities that can be found throughout the state is great. The guide is easy to use and the information contained on each species is fantastic, the line drawings especially. The section on non-native invasive plants is also a nice addition. I can see this being useful for both the amateur naturalists and professionals; highly recommended!
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Awesome-but can be found for much cheaperReview Date: 2006-07-16

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John TrussellReview Date: 2008-07-07

Provides a photographic context to O'Connor's art and life...Review Date: 2008-07-24
The photographs present typical middle-Georgia scenes, including: house trailers, signs with fundamentalist slogans, junk yards, "articial niggers," Stone Mountain, old barns, country stores and a "pig parlor."
Features a number of photographs of O'Connoresque individuals relaxing, socializing, worshipping, or working in agricultural settings along with photographs of the interior and exterior of O'Connor's homes in Milledgeville and on the nearby family farm, Andalusia.
Includes a twenty-page introduction to O'Connor's life preceding the main body of photographs, along with an additional twenty-one photographs of Flannery, her parents and friends.
R. Neil Scott / Middle Tennessee State University

Kinney provides an indexed, annotated bibliographic guide to Flannery O'Connor's personal library...Review Date: 2008-07-26
Bibliographic annotations include: whether the book is in hardcover or paperback; publication and series information; publication or copyright date; and, whether editorial information is included.
The annotations are followed by descriptive acknowledgements of markings in the book contents, including: whether O'Connor had signed or dated the book; and, whether any marginal linings, marinalia, underlining, check-marks, or asterisks are visible. (States that O'Connor's original form and spelling were preserved.)
Notes that her magazines and journals are listed separately.
Also includes references to reviews that she wrote on a particular book and whether any mention of the book, "its preparation, publication, reception, or the ideas in it and O'Connor's evaluation of it," are in any of O'Connor's letters published in The Habit of Being, edited by Sally Fitzgerald.
Provides insight into O'Connor's reading interests from excerpts of letters to "A" [Elizabeth "Betty" Hester] and Janet McKane. Reports how she acquired the volumes included, notes significant gaps in the collection, and suggests titles of more than thirty books that the compiler (Kinney) is certain that she would have used extensively.
Suggests that the contents of the Library reflects O'Connor's "staunch Catholicism" and supports those who view her as a "keen amateur theologian." Focuses on marginalia and various other underlined and penciled portions of text that serve as "direct signposts" to help readers map out O'Connor's "aesthetic theory."
R. Neil Scott / Middle Tennessee State University

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Discusses O'Connor's view of the 1960s South, its alienation and views she held as a Catholic, Southern intellectual...Review Date: 2008-07-19
Discusses her view of the grotesque, her treatment of black characters, and the various philosophical and religious themes seen in her work. Provides a fairly close, but informal reading of "The Displaced Person." Sees it as reflective of the South as a region, and asserts that, through this story, O'Connor "pursued her main business of storytelling as a means of showing the depth of God's mysteries." Contends that the result is "a series of reminders about God's earth as well as His universe, [and] His Commandments," resulting in "a rare and exceedingly high kind of sociology, history, [and] social psychology."
Discusses her comment that the South's alienation was "`not alienation enough,'" and her belief that the South was finding itself forced not only out of its sins, but its "`few virtues'" as well. Considers such topics as: pride, intellectual conviction, "practical heresies, the South's "`old-time religion,'" and "backwoods fundamentalism" as seen in "Parker's Back," "Good Country People," and "The Artificial Nigger." Suggests that O'Connor's "own theological sophistication enabled her to connect the sights and sounds of back-country, southern twentieth-century life to a history that began in Christ's time, and even before."
Coles illustrates his points with lengthy explications of O'Connor's novel, Wise Blood and her story, "Parker's Back." Regards O'Connor as a "Southern intellectual" who "steeped herself" in literature, religion, art, psychology, and in "her own sharp fashion, the South's social and political matters." Sees this background evident in "her repeated jabs at social science, psychology, theorists, and ... the entire liberal, secular world." Reads "The Lame Shall Enter First" as O'Connor's attempt "to dramatize an incompatibility she has seen about her in this modern world: intellectuals who mock traditional religion, then take a certain religious way of getting along with others."
Contrasts intellectual and spiritual knowledge in "Good Country People," "The Enduring Chill" and The Violent Bear It Away. Refers to works by Simone Weil, St. Thomas Aquinas, Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung and Georges Bernanos.
Concludes that O'Connor was "a writer with few peers...of enormous promise...a soul blinded by faith; hence with an uncanny endowment of sight."
R. Neil Scott / Middle Tennessee State University

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A must for anyone interested in contemporary poetryReview Date: 2005-12-06

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A beautifully written ode to fly fishing and natureReview Date: 1998-03-05
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