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HeartfeltReview Date: 2008-03-18
POIGNANT STORYReview Date: 2008-02-15
I believe each book can be read on their own, but hope you can read each book in order because the wonderful characters or their decendants appear in the books that follow.
This book is a warm, heartfelt story, sometimes sad and sometimes quite humorous. A very entertaining story.
Lisa Wingate is one of my favorite writers whom I have recentlly discovered. Plan to read all she writes.
Life LessonsReview Date: 2006-06-26
God works in a mysterious way! Great novel-A+++!Review Date: 2006-09-27
Her sister Kate, who is very well settled on their Grandmother Rose's farm, calls Kate and invites her one of these days to come for a weekend visit. So on the spur of the moment, without thinking, Karen decides to pack her bags right then, and get out of her turmoil-even though she has some misgivings. So she leaves a message for James, and takes off.
While on the plane, she meets Keiler, a young guy who is studying at college, and possibly seminary. Karen learns that he is counselor of the Jumpkids program-a summer length program to keep kids out of trouble, and help them develop their skills in the musical arts, other arts, and theater. At the time Karen has no idea how this will touch her life when Dell comes into it.
Once she reaches Missouri, Karen can't bear to tell Kate that she has lost her job. There was always such sibling rivalry there that the two women have trouble feeling close to each other. Kate was always the best at everything, while Karen was always second best no matter what. Karen also meets Dell, the impoverished girl across the lake from the farm who lives with her Grandma who is very sickly can't really watch her, and Uncle Bobby, who is nothing but a drunkard, and treats Dell shamefully, calling her a "nigger child," since she was born of both races.
Karen hits it off with Dell right away, and sees the potential in this poor child. She has special talents for music and the arts that no one has ever cared to recognize. So Karen really takes a deep interest in Dell, and pulling some strings, inquires into the Jumpkids program through the church minister. Dell was very very low in self-esteem, and afraid to try anything new-but with much coaxing on Karen's part, she decides to try. Karen made a promise that she would be there for her the first couple days-and what happens is that Karen falls in love with this program, and becomes one of the workers herself.
After a little time, Karen along with James decide to stay in Missouri and change their lives in a new direction. The authorities are called in for Dell finally after something strange happens in her broken home, and arrangements are made for Karen and James to become Dell's foster parents. It seems that Dell is the child they always needed-and from there the child will flourish and grow in many ways.
Karen really comes down to earth in this story, and giving up her high-powered job after being called back, decides that it is better to live with much less money, yet be happier helping youth talent develop. She and Kate also have a new beginning as sisters.
I thoroughly enjoyed this bookReview Date: 2006-07-11

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Spanish Like Crazy VS. Learn Spanish in Your CarReview Date: 2008-08-30
Advice:
If you are leaving for a Spanish-speaking country within one month, and if you want to be able to get by and ask "At what time does the last bus leave for the beach?", "Where is the bathroom?", and "The air conditioning does not work.", then buy Learn Spanish in Your Car. No question.
If you have never taken any Spanish in school and do not even know what it means to "congugate a verb", then buy Learn Spanish Like Crazy. No question.
If you know the very basics, and want to build your vocabulary quickly, like for a vacation, buy Spanish in your Car.
If you want a supplement to a Spanish class you are taking or about to take in a classroom setting, buy Spanish Like Crazy.
Summaries:
Learn Spanish in Your Car:
Lots of vocabulary quickly. Travel focused. Does NOT teach verb congugations until far into the course. I took 1 year of Spanish in school 20 yrs ago. If I did not already know that "tengo" and "tiene" are the same root word, I think I would have been fairly lost with this course from the onset. Within a month on commuting, however, I think this course will have you getting by for a vacation. If you care mostly about getting by (directions, time, booking a hotel room, buying a bus ticket), and not about perfect grammar, I like this a lot.
Spanish Like Crazy:
Starts like a Spanish class would in school. You start by congugating -AR verbs. Then you learn questions, "Do you practice Spanish?" and possessive pronouns. The lessons are like drill sessions: "Now ask, 'Is the coat his?' Now answer, 'no, it is not his coat. It is mine.' Now say, 'It is my coat, but the hat is not mine'." Intense, but you'll know the grammar by the end. Vocabular comes later, but it does not seem travel oriented.
I like using them both. However, I have 6 months before my trip to South America.
Fantastico!!Review Date: 2008-06-06
When I get more money I will be purchasing the full Learning Spanish Like Crazy sets. This is great, and much cheaper than aot of the one that advertise on TV.
Love it!!
Downloadable Video Lessons Recently Added as a Bonus Gift When You Order this Course Review Date: 2007-12-01
a language tyroReview Date: 2007-09-10
I will definitely be buying the rest of the program once I master these first lessons and recommend the program to anyone wanting to speak spanish with people on the american continents.
Learning Spanish like Crazy LightReview Date: 2008-01-03

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Mona Lisa Safai- TCM ReviewsReview Date: 2008-09-02
Second, an artist desperately tries to thrive and discover love despite his family's domineering ways. In the next story, Potter treats his readers to a hard-boiled crime story filled with all the fixings. That includes an unexpected twist at the end. Potter also gallantly writes a scenario of the world ending story thriller as a flash fiction piece.
Up to now, Potter's stories contain a character-driven and emotional quality which sets them apart from many other stories. However, his last two stories are the most fascinating to read by far. They expose the human condition, with all its flaws and potential, and challenge his characters to behave as they see fit in that immediate circumstance. In the story, Blessing or Curse, he pinned the title appropriately, referring to a large lottery win. However, a kidnapping for ransom which follows changes the outcome.
Potter uses concise dialogue and the story is about a twist of fate. His last story is about a lost teenager and a man with a rescuer complex. It is probably is his best story but also most complex tale in the collection. The intermingling motives of the two find their way together against a world that does not understand them. These characters help each other and themselves. They find refuge in honesty in each other. In a sea of confusing societal impositions, they learn to rediscover trust.
Potter's writing skills shine as a storyteller throughout his collection. His ability to intersperse back story and control the speed of the plot is especially important when it comes to character development. I highly recommend Lighting the Dark Side to all readers. His stories captivate the mind in all respects. I hope to see more works from William Potter soon!
An excellent group of short storiesReview Date: 2008-09-24
Reviewed by Kam Aures for RebeccasReads (9/08)
"Lighting the Dark Side: Six Modern Tales" consists of six short stories, all of which are very different and unique, spanning the full gamut of fictional genres. The six short stories included in the book are: "Bent, Not Broken," "In the Gray," "Prominent Couple Slain," "May 18, 2010," "Blessing or Curse?," and "Surviving the Fall." After reading all three of the novellas and all three of the shorter works, I can honestly say that I enjoyed each and every one of them.
My favorite novella in the book was the very first one, "Bent, Not Broken." It is about a man named Dwayne Johnson who is plagued by severe obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). We watch Dwayne struggle as what are normal day to day activities for most of us are much more challenging for him. His anxieties are compounded by the fact that his co-workers gang up on him by moving things in his cubicle that he needs to have just so. You can't help but to feel for the poor guy. Dwayne meets a girl and falls in love with her, but his many issues will be the cause of much strain and difficulty in the relationship.
It is in this first novella that the meaning of the title of the book, "Lighting the Dark Side," is revealed as well. Dwayne's girlfriend Dee-Dee is in a mud bath reflecting and meditating. On the phone to Dwayne she tells him that she is "just spending some time lighting the dark side." She says, "everyone has a dark side" which is "that ugliness about our personality that scares the people who see it." What we need to do "is to fight it, to turn a light against it." (p. 65)
Each story draws you in within the first few sentences and will hold your attention through the completion. All of the characters are well developed and seem very real. I became so involved in each tale that I found myself wishing that these weren't short stories and that each work was a full-length novel instead. Don't get me wrong, the writing was very thorough and the stories were not lacking anything, but I enjoyed the characters and the writing style so much that I just wished that they were longer! In the author's biography that was sent along with the book it states that he is "re-working two full-length novel manuscripts for publishing" and if these works are anything similar to "Lighting the Dark Side: Six Modern Tales" then I can't wait to read them!
Something very differentReview Date: 2008-07-02
"Lighting the Dark Side" contains a collection of six refreshingly different short stories. Each one is very unique and cannot be compared to the others. I really enjoyed reading the stories. They are about human nature and how we deal with hardships. Sometimes we overcome them, sometimes we obliterate them and sometimes we just make adjustments in ourselves to live with them.
What I discovered really interesting is that in almost every story, I found aspects of myself in the characters. This allowed me to feel like I could relate to what they had going on inside themselves. Some of these aspects ranged from a desire for vigilantism in situations with no other way out; a desire to help others by going way beyond what is expected; and that need to ask myself why I allow things to happen when I know the outcome ahead of time. Kind of like, why did I do that again? The examples in the stories are so much more interesting than any story that I have possibly lived.
Each short story or novella is very complete within itself, however, I found myself wishing that the stories would go on longer. I wasn't ready to leave the lives of these interesting characters. This is what made the book even more fun because I found myself thinking about the stories later on, wondering what happened to people that never even existed. The characters are very well developed and intricately woven into their plots that they seem very real. Their humanity is expressed through their shortcomings, and their need to change their situations.
This book, "Lighting the Dark Side," by William R. Potter, will definitely be enjoyed by all fans of fiction. I think that it would make an excellent selection for a reader's group or for a college course. I would love to hear the interesting discussions that will be held about these stories.
A Look at the Darker Side of LifeReview Date: 2008-06-30
Potter has a way of building the characters in his stories so that you can begin to understand what they are going through, and you care what happens to them. That's not to imply that all of the characters are nice, or even likable, but that only adds to the realism of this collection of short stories. We all have to deal with people like the type found in these stories in out daily lives.
These stories show a lot of insight into the dysfunction of people as they deal with love, betrayal, and a host of personal/family/relationship issues in a realistic world where nothing is perfect and sometimes the best you can hope for is to live to try again tomorrow.
Potter has a gift for getting down to what really makes his characters tick. He examines their hopes fears and motivations in a way that captivates the attention and makes you want to keep reading to find out more.
It was a very captivation book, and one that was well worth the time I spent reading it.
This is a great book!Review Date: 2008-06-30
While I realize there are many people out there who truely deal with OCD, I also believe that everyone has their own...tendancies. This piece really shed some light on what people deal with on a day to day basis, as well as being told in a riviting, entertaining way.
The author has made it easy to really connect with the characters in this book through these detailed stories. In fact, you might not notice how time flies when you're reading this one; it really is hard to put it down!

Full circleReview Date: 2007-08-23
Like Gold Refined (Prairie Legacy)Review Date: 2007-05-13
Great ending to a great seriesReview Date: 2005-10-24
Great Companion to the SeriesReview Date: 2003-05-25
Virginia lives on a farm with her husband, Jonathan, and their children. Jonathan works with his brother breeding and raising horses. Lots of changes happen for Virginia in a few short years.
Their daughter, Mindy, was left with them by her mother when she was very young. Mindy knows about her "real" mother
because she still has some memories of her. But since she has lived with Virginia and Jonathan she's called them mother and
father because they are the only real family she's known.
Mindy hopes her mother will soon come to Christ. She prays
for her as often as possible.
Mindy's mother comes for a visit and requests something that Jonathan and Virginia
won't agree to.
I really liked this book! I like the Love Comes Softly series better so far but maybe I need to finish this series before I compare them. But I do suggest this series, it does a great job of continuing the story of the Davis Family.
Like Gold RefindedReview Date: 2003-02-20
does write another series. or is there already ?

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WHY ISN'T THIS BOOK ON THE BESTSELLER LIST?Review Date: 2004-01-23
Depressing look into the world of authorsReview Date: 2001-01-30
Although it presents what I imagine to be a realistic view of the creative process, the author presents a plethora of examples of well-known authors and their experiences. The problem? He uses the exact same examples over and over again. The language that he uses is very colloquial and the laid back tone is quite surprising, considering it is a "scholarly" work.
The biggest problem I have with the book is this. How is it possible for an author that is clearly not a best-selling author know what exactly the best-selling process is like? If not for the examples of other authors, it would be impossible for him to talk about the process.
All in all, this book was a big disappointment, and all it shows is the negative aspect to book publishing.
READ ITReview Date: 2000-07-06
Spectacularly Interesting!Review Date: 2001-02-08
A Celebration of Creative WritingReview Date: 2000-03-27

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Classic...Review Date: 2007-04-09
Pagan Chills and Great CharactersReview Date: 2008-08-07
Keep in mind that this is a British author and the story takes place in Scotland and Northern England--if locale is a deciding factor for you. It may also require a bit of patience from readers who are used to shorter novels; this is a 600-pager, not meant for those who like a "quick read." But let me tell you, the rewards are definitely worth it. It's one of those books where the characters are very special and therefore you do not want the book to end, even though you're dying to find out what happens next.
For those who enjoy supernatural fiction they can sink their teeth into, look no further. Rickman provides the detailed characterization and spooky atmosphere that many chill-seekers are craving. It takes a lot of skill to pull off a book this involved, but no worries; Rickman has the necessary talent.
A book to treasure. Highly recommended.
Slooow cookin'Review Date: 2007-05-20
Okay, strange analogy, but this book had the same effect on me. It started cold, then warmed up gradually, until all my senses were captivated. My patience was starting to wear thin, then BOOM! the flavors all combined and it was every person for himself.
Did I like the book? Absolutely yes. Can I describe it to you? Um, nope. Luckily, there are other reviews here that have taken on that responsibility, and have done so very admirably. I did, in fact, pick up this book based on their recommendations. As a vague overview, you could say this is a mystery, a paranormal, a horror story, a religious confrontation, a small town mentality gone amuck, modern civilization overflowing its boundaries. A love story. A story of good and evil, pride and prejudice, charity and greed, science vs faith. Or... none/all of the above. Take your pick, all the spices are here, savor what you like, and push what you don't enjoy to the side of your plate (Yes, I'll stop, the analogy is starting to wear thin for me, too).
In short, HIGHLY RECOMMENDED for those who have time to appreciate the nuances of the plot. Those who can give little time to a book might want to wait until they can.
It came from beneath the bogReview Date: 2007-02-02
Folksinger Moira Cairns, who shows up in multiple Rickman novels, plays a prominent role in "The Man in the Moss," along with a band of white magicians called the Bridelow Mother's League.
The title character himself has been dead for roughly two thousand years--the man in the moss, who I believe Rickman modeled after the Lindlow bogman. At any rate, both fictional and non-fictional bogmen were victims of a Celtic triple sacrifice.
According to the Roman historian, Lucan (AD 39 - AD 65), the Celts sometimes sacrificed one person to please all three aspects of their triple god: first, death by three blows to the skull; second, death by strangulation and/or throat cutting; and third, death by drowning (in this case, drowning in a peat moss bog.)
Again, following the research that was done on the Lindlow man, Rickman's characters believe that the Man in the Moss sacrificed himself willingly to thwart a Roman invasion. His willingness to die and his 'displeasure' at being dug up out of the bog are a dark, steady undertow that drags more than one character in this book to his or her doom. The people of the isolated Pennine village of Bridelow want their bogman returned to the grave in order to keep some unspecified supernatural evil at bay---and they figure that they need to get him reburied before Samhain (November 1), the Celtic Feast of the Dead.
Two major obstacles prevent the villagers from reinterring the Man in the Moss:
* the scientific johnnies are horrified by the thought of giving up their find to a pack of superstitious villagers, and they have him locked away in a climate-controlled room at the University;
* an evil sorcerer wants to steal the bogman and use him in a satanic rite that will destroy the village of Bridelow and its Mothers' Union of white magicians.
Death is a repeated visitor to the village on the Moss in the weeks leading up to Samhain. Rickman builds to a slow, sinister climax and this reader at least was never really sure who was dead and who was alive, and which of the two conditions was the most desirable--at least in Bridelow.
Celtic horror for patient, intelligent readersReview Date: 2007-04-23
But, things are about to change. First, the brewery gets bought out by a big corporate brewery, with many people losing their jobs. Second, the preacher at the Christian church falls ill, and is replaced, at least temporarily. Old Reverend Hans Gruber was originally an outsider, had but he had learned to peaceably co-exist with the Mothers Union and their beliefs. His replacement, Reverend Joel Beard, is a charismatic, let's-clean-house type, who takes it as his mission to "purify" Bridelow and drive out the evil pagan practices.
Is that all there is to it, though? Ma Wagstaff, the leader of the Mothers Union, distrusts coincidence, and suspects a connection between Reverend Beard and the selling of the brewery. Even Ma hasn't guessed at how big this really is, though!
The two central characters, amidst a large supporting cast, are Moira Cairns and Mungo MacBeth. Moira is a Celtic singer descended from a line of women who are not at all ordinary. She played in a band with two Bridelow residents, Matt Castle and Willie Wagstaff. Moira is not from Bridelow, but ends up being a crucial player in the battle that has been quietly, surreptitiously begun there. Mungo MacBeth is an American filmmaker of Scottish ancestry, who has been sent by his family to discover his heritage. He does, and it is much bigger, darker, and scarier than he expected. Will he and Moira survive? Will they end up together?
You might be wondering, about now, where the book's title comes from. While the local pub, connected to the brewery, is called The Man i' the Moss, that is not it. What starts all the wheels turning, toward disaster, salvation, or a bit of both, is the discovery, by a road construction crew, of a body buried in the peat-bog adjacent to Bridelow. An old body. Very old. The Man in the Moss turns out to have been an outsider, who was ritually sacrificed about a millenium before, to become the town's guardian against evil. When his peatmoss-preserved body is discovered, the government whisks it away to a museum for study. That's not good for Bridelow, who has lost its Guardian! Lo and behold, the body gets stolen and cannot be found by the authorities. But he will be found. And that's when things get really strange.
My take: This book is for patient readers only. There is a large cast of characters, all of whom are well-developed. The setting is also developed well, as is the theme of how pagan and Christian beliefs can mesh, or clash. All of that detail makes for a long story with a pace that is far from quick. The writing is impeccable, though, and the development of setting and cast combines with a complex plot to yield a very rich tale. The further you read, the more the story unfolds, and gets more intense, bizarre, and riveting. There are deaths, both predictable and not. Some big characters fade as the story progresses, to be replaced by others emerging into prominence. This story is as much about the town, its history, and its future, as it is about the people. The ending is, to some extent, what I expected, but is also very surprising, in other ways.
Now that I've read this book, I'd like to visit (fictional) Bridelow and meet (some) of these (fictional) people. But, I'd make it be on a sunny day, and I'd go with a friend, and I would be very careful to offend no one! Come to think of it, I did just go there.
Strengths: I know this town and these people. That's how well this tale is told.
Weaknesses: It is long (594 pages) and detailed; patient readers needed. Not for the squeamish, either!
Conclusion: This is a dark, complex horror story, rooted in Celtic beliefs and their meshing, or clashing, with Christianity. A long book, but well worth the effort!
Recommended: For those who love Celtic horror stories, and who are patient readers.


This author invented the "Time Machine", time travel device.Review Date: 2008-10-05
LOLReview Date: 2008-10-05
For having so much truth, he is very ignorant to the fact that MANY people time travel.
I think the funniest quote was something along the lines of, "Perhaps I am the only human who can do this?"
I also suspect he wrote half of his own reviews. Spend more time making your sentence structure understandable and less time writing reviews for yourself. :)
Popular book among our friends.Review Date: 2008-02-11
Great book, good reads.Review Date: 2007-11-10
Get this book, before it is out of print, then it will be great human lost.
If you like the movie "Pay Check" then you must like this book too.Review Date: 2007-09-19
Author stated, "there is no 'time machine,' but there is a similar device which human can use and travel between time," the answer is in this book.
This book takes billions of human years for author to be born, and the first human is ever to write a book with this subject, it is worth -- every penny to read it.
Highly recommend it.

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Live! Live! Live!Review Date: 2008-07-15
No. Eugene Walter as artist, writer, gardener, gourmand, et al, was no lightweight. Although he was a great storyteller, this is only 1/10th the man.
I rather despise both George Plimpton and Katherine Clark's introductions to MILKING THE MOON, though I have to be very grateful to her for writing it. I find their comments condescending.
My sense of Eugene Walter is that he was consumately alone in this life. And lonely. That he suffered a very hard childhood. And, that because he didn't "make it rich", those who are able to turn a name into a NAME, scorned him. But that's my take on E.W. You must have your own.
And Eugene Walter turns up everywhere, for example, turning up in Ronni Lundy's fine cookbook, BUTTER BEANS TO BLACKBERRIES ...Recipes from the Southern Garden, and, much to my supreme delight, in Joan Marble's NOTES FROM AN ITALIAN GARDEN. I cannot wait to see where Eugene will turn up next!
Someone has to release all the tapes Clark made, unedited. I want them. And, someone is missing out on making a fascinating movie.
Being thereReview Date: 2002-03-06
Milking the MemoriesReview Date: 2002-02-28
Gore Vidal calls Eugene Walter the "nice" Truman CapoteReview Date: 2003-05-29
Just like talking to Eugene.Review Date: 2002-03-19
Eugene was the consummate storyteller. One of those who never let the truth get in the way of a good yarn. His idea was to make you enjoy where you were and who you were. To inject a little wonderousness into the world. Although based in truth, nothing he told was strictly true.
This book captures him almost perfectly. Although it cannot convey his gestures and antics and voice, it does convey his mind and gift for gab. Pour yourself a glass of port and read with the voice of an eccentric Southern uncle in your head and Eugene starts to come out. It's not quite the same as being there, but this book is as close as any of us will ever be again.

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Beautiful and PoignantReview Date: 2008-08-14
I cannot recommend this book enough. Beautiful from the first word to the last.
Sweet MagnoliasReview Date: 2008-07-25
An important, epic storyReview Date: 2007-11-21
I admire the way Ms. Norris creates such an epic feel in this novel, not unlike To Kill a Mockingbird, and, in a slightly greater stretch, Gone With The Wind. When you have finished with the book, you feel as if you have somehow experienced a lifetime in a historical period that is not your own---- more importantly, a historical period that is uncomfortably, and gratefully, not your own.
While the story spans a long period, it reads quickly (despite the fact that I typically don't) and when you have completed the book, you will feel as if it was an important story for other people to know, and a also a feeling of gratitude that Ms. Norris told it so damned well.
It's a bit rare in lesbian literature to have a love story contain so much depth that the love the two characters feel for each other is so well ingrained within the storyline that it is not THE story...but rather the supporting structure of the book. I really liked that about this book.
Without giving anything away (I am not a fan of reviews that tell the story)---suffice to say that the connections in this book feel as real as novel can get. Don't hesitate to read it, since I typically don't enjoy historical pieces, I really enjoyed living this story. Some of the characters are with me still!
(3 1/2 stars) A nice effortReview Date: 2007-11-18
There's the old problem of being an unwelcome woman in a man's world when Mary takes on the challenge of returning a neglected lumber empire to profitability. Then there's Lila Dubose, the boss's wife, who stirs up desires Mary can't escape, fears she can't control, and reminders that she is surrounded by threat.
Set in the shadow of the civil rights movement, "Miss McGhee" is a sweeping tale of forbidden love in a turbulent time. First-time author Bett Norris portrays one of the darkest and most troubling times in American history with exceptional skill and sensitivity, giving us a unique insight into our own recent history.
Can the world be changed just through your individual effort? And can a person change from being naïve, and oblivious and conservative to someone that tries to change the world? Those are the main themes of "Miss McGhee", an historical novel that, through the point of view of two women in love with each other, shows us 17 years of the changes in Myrtlewood, Alabama, from the end of World War II to the civil rights movement in the 60s.
Bett Norris manages to keep us interested throughout the novel and to create two appealing characters in both Mary McGhee and Lila Dubose, and this is certainly a book above average in terms of lesbian fiction. The main problem is the plot, or the lack thereof. Frequently things don't flow plotwise, e.g. the way Lila's racism is introduced, or the dialogue Mary has with Dr Morgan about that, after being described as someone that wanted to be left alone. There is also the "deus ex-machina" appearance of Sammie in the last part of the novel to solve problems between the two main characters. Other times there are things in the novel that make no sense. There are several dialogues between Lila and Mary about possible attitudes to take regarding Buchanan, and those possible attitudes are mostly never acted upon, making the reader wonder why this is so. Also, Lila and Mary's reaction during Sammie's second visit, could make sense in the beginning of their relationship but not after seven years. Anyway, for a first novel this book represents a nice effort.
Historical Romance with a TwistReview Date: 2007-10-05
There's the old problem of being an unwelcome woman in a man's world when Mary takes on the challenge of returning a neglected lumber empire to profitability. Then there's Lila Dubose, the boss' wife, who stirs up desires Mary can't escape, fears she can't control, and reminders that she is surrounded by threat.
Set in thte shadow of the civil rights movement, Miss McGhee is a sweeping tale of forbidden love in a turbulent time. First-time author Bett Norris portrays one of the darkest and most troubling times in American history with exceptional skill and sensitivity, giving us a unique insight into our own recent history. - END OF BACK COVER TEXT
If you've ever read my reviews, you know I get excited about new authors in the lesbian fiction genre. This first offering by Bett Norris was especially intriguing because it is set in the Old South. There aren't a lot of books in this setting - except for places like Miami and New Orleans - because rural, Southern towns just aren't that exciting. However, Norris pulls this one off without a hitch.
The author introduces Mary McGhee, a woman who takes a job in an unfamiliar town to get away from a bad situation (i.e., she had an affair with a young woman and was paid off by her father to keep quiet and leave town). Little does she know that she's walking into a no-win situation when she's hired by the Dubose family to run their lumber mill.
Mary pushes the limits of tolerance when she hires black men to work alongside the white men, when she hires the family of Mrs. Dubose (a woman who the town believes was basically hired to marry her mentally retarded husband), when she begins helping the black families to improve living conditions and educational opportunities, but especially when she falls in love with her employer. Not only do the two women have to hide their romance from the townsfolk (and society in general, given that the book is set in the 50s), the also feel guilt for cheating on the ambivalent Mr. Tommy Dubose. The only question is - can their love overcome these outside forces?
Being raised in the South in a conservative Baptist household, I could certainly relate to many of the attitudes in `Miss McGhee.' The most disturbing thing about the story is that many of these attitudes still exist - especially in smaller, rural towns away from the Gulf Coast. Hopefully this will change one day. In the mean time, Norris has a winner on her hands with the veritable `Miss McGhee.'
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Insight into the Victorian Writing/Publishing SceneReview Date: 2004-05-01
Why do I say this so confidently? Well, as Gissing was particularly self-aware and as he was particularly oppressed when writing "New Grub Street," in this novel he writes about what it's like to be a writer in London in the 1880's and 1890's. He essentially writes about his own life and those he find around him, all of whom are trying to make a living on writing.
Gissings seems to portray himself through the main character, Reardon. When the story opens, Reardon is struggling. His sophisticated wife is getting fed up with their impoverished lifestyle and with her husband's inability to write decent material. Reardon, a sensitive soul, is floundering under mounting pressure and stress. He is torn between his desire to write sophisticated, meaningful material and the public demand for "fluff." The more stressed laid on him, the less he is able to create and stick with any plausible fiction novel. He becomes more and more fererish and unable to work, and he is devastated as he loses his wife's love and respect.
Around this central character Reardon,
Gissing builds a very full and weighty cast of characters. A small sampling of these characters are:
- The embittered,
older column writer/reviewer, Yule, whose temperament has made so many enemies during his career that he is still laboring
hard to support his small family at the end of his life.
- Yule's daugher, Marion, who is very clever but who is also
very vulnerable. Her education has made her too good for many positions and marriages but her lack of money makes her a poor
match for the educated class.
- Reardon's friend Milvain, who is an ambitious young man who has no problem writing exactly
what the masses want. He knows his talents, he knows the market, and he knows his stuff won't last for posterity. But he
is determined to live a comfortable life, make a strategic marriage and become a semi-respected man.
- Biffen, another
friend of Reardon's, sympathizes most with Reardon's situation and condition. Two peas in a pod, these men spend long hours
discuss meter, prose and ancient poetry.
I found myself continually amazed at Gissing's amazing ability to get into the head of many individuals in his large cast and to see how the world makes sense through each's eyes. Gissing also provides us with a wealth of information about the Victorian publishing scene. It was amazing to read that writers and publishers then were struggling with the same issues writers and publishers are struggling with today.
Additionally, Gissing gives you an unglorified look at poverty and the impoverished educated class of London at that time. While Dickens' works on the poor is idyllic and sentimental, Gissing simply relates the life he has known. There is nothing exceptional or amazing, and Gissing seems to argue that poverty takes character out of a man rather then build up a man's character.
Overall, I found this to be a fascinating piece...though perhaps a slow read. For those interested in publishing, writing, realistic portrayals of Victorian England, or other such topics, this is a fantastic work.
Gissing's shade would smile Review Date: 2006-05-26
The Hateful Spirit of Literary RancourReview Date: 2002-05-28
The anti-heroes of "New Grub Street" are presented to us as the novel begins - Jasper Milvain is a young, if somewhat impoverished, but highly ambitious man, eager to be a figure of influence in literary society at whatever cost. His friend, Edwin Reardon, on the other hand, was brought up on the classics, and toils away in obscurity, determined to gain fame and reputation through meaningful, psychological, and strictly literary fiction. Family matters beset the two - Jasper has two younger sisters to look out for, and Edwin has a beautiful and intelligent wife, who has become expectant of Edwin's potential fame. Throw into the mix Miss Marian Yule, daughter of a declining author of criticism, whose own reputation was never fully realized, and who has indentured his daughter to literary servitude, and we have a pretty list of discontented and anxious people struggling in the cut-throat literary marketplace of London.
Money is of supreme importance in "New Grub Street," and it would be pointless to write a review without making note of it. As always, the literary life is one which is not remunerative for the mass of people who engage upon it, and this causes no end of strife in the novel. As Milvain points out, the paradox of making money in the literary world is that one must have a well-known reputation in order to make money from one's labours. At the same time, one must have money in order to move in circles where one's reputation may be made. This is the center of the novel's difficulties - should one or must one sacrifice principles of strictly literary fame and pander to a vulgar audience in order to simply survive? The question is one in which Reardon finds the greatest challenges to his marriage, his self-esteem, and even his very existence. For Jasper Milvain and his sisters, as well as for Alfred and Marian Yule, there is no question that the needs of subsistence outweigh most other considerations.
"New Grub Street" profoundly questions the relevance of classic literature and high culture to the great mass of people, and by proxy, to the nation itself. For England, which propagated its sense of international importance throughout the nineteenth century by encouraging the study of English literature in its colonial holdings, the matter becomes one of great significance. The careers of Miss Dora Milvain and Mr. Whelpdale, easily the novel's two most charming, endearing, and sympathetic characters, attempt to illustrate the ways in which modern literature may be profitable to both the individual who writes it and the audiences towards which they aim. They may be considered the moral centers of the novel, and redeem Gissing's work from being entirely fatalistic.
"New Grub Street" is a novel that will haunt me for quite some time. As a "man of letters" myself, I can only hope that the novel will serve as an object lesson, and one to which I may turn in hope and despair. The novel is well written, its characters and situations drawn in a very realistic and often sympathetic way. Like the ill-fated "ignobly decent" novel of Mr. Biffen's, "Mr. Bailey, Grocer," "New Grub Street" may seem less like a novel, and more like a series of rambling biographical sketches, but they are indelible and lasting sketches of literary lives as they were in the original Grub Street, still yet in Gissing's time, and as they continue to-day. Very highly recommended.
Whither Arnold's "Sweetness and Light?"Review Date: 2003-07-02
Milvain identifies as vulgar the most lucrative market for the product of the man of letter's labor. The vulgarians, or "quarter educated," drive the market (479), and since they have been determined to desire nothing more than chatty ephemera, they have successfully opened an insuperable gulf between material success in writing and artistic success. Reardon's psychologically penetrating novels just aren't in demand. Therefore, there emerges quite an interesting conceptual shift within the nascent hegemony of the quarter-educated as established by their purchasing power: what was once considered healthy artistic integrity has transmuted into a peculiar kind of petit bourgeois hubris, if, in the new paradigm, the writer is more an artisan than an artist. Therefore, Reardon's artistically-compromised and padded three-volume novel, written with no other end in mind than to pander to the vulgar reader, nonetheless achieves only modest success because, the fact that it is indistinguishable from countless other similar works glutting the market aside, his novel is infected from his irrepressible integrity, and thus his novel becomes a strange sort of counterfeit, a psychological narrative masquerading as a popular novel. Reardon thus becomes a sort of Coriolanus among writers.
Milvain, on the other hand, is a sort of Henry Ford among writers; he reveals his particular genius when offering advice to his sister Maud about how to write religious works for juveniles: "I tell you, writing is a business. Get together half-a-dozen fair specimens of the Sunday school prize; study them; discover the essential points of such a composition; hit upon new attractions; then go to work methodically, so many pages a day" (13). In other words, Jasper has managed to streamline and to mechanize the writing process. He studies previous works, abstracts formulae from them, isolates the elements of these formulae, and then deploys and rearranges these elements to give his own writing a patina of originality. By treating writing as an exercise in manipulating formulae, Jasper exchanges "authenticity" (whatever that word means anymore) for the convenience and efficiency of not having to grapple with his own potentially mutable and recalcitrant genius. Jasper did not invent writing, just as Ford did not invent the automobile. But
Karen has not been home since the death of Grandmother Rose two years ago. Going home brings back many happy memories of a woman Karen had loved. While at home dealing with the emotional drama taking place in her life, Karen also becomes involved in a summer camp program called JUMP KIDS. As Karen's her outlook on life changes, her heart opens and she learns to love again.
THE LANGUAGE OF SYCAMORES is a beautifully written story about a woman who finds herself needing direction in her life. This book about family and the ties that come with them is a novel to be cherished. The central plot of this novel may center around Karen, but it is the secondary characters and the love that shines from the pages that make this an emotional read. Learning about her history Karen finds the things her Grandma Rose did and said all come from a past that she knew nothing about. As she learns about her ancestors, her life takes on a new direction and she grows as a person.
Lisa Wingate is definitely a talented writer. As the third novel in a four book series, THE LANGUAGE OF SYCAMORES can definitely stand alone, but having read and become enthralled with Karen, and her family, this reviewer definitely will be seeking out the previous (TENDING ROSES, GOOD HOPE ROAD) and the fourth novel, DRENCHED IN LIGHT. Having previously been released in 2005, luckily for this reader, all four novels are on bookshelves everywhere.
Review Courtesy of LoveRomancesandmore