Rabu, 31 Desember 2014

~~ Download Ebook Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill and Bajor (Worlds of Star Trek) (No. 2), by Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti

Download Ebook Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill and Bajor (Worlds of Star Trek) (No. 2), by Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds Of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill And Bajor (Worlds Of Star Trek) (No. 2), By Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti. Is this your downtime? What will you do after that? Having extra or downtime is really remarkable. You could do everything without pressure. Well, we expect you to spare you few time to review this e-book Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds Of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill And Bajor (Worlds Of Star Trek) (No. 2), By Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti This is a god publication to accompany you in this leisure time. You will not be so tough to know something from this book Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds Of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill And Bajor (Worlds Of Star Trek) (No. 2), By Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti Much more, it will assist you to obtain far better details and also encounter. Even you are having the wonderful works, reviewing this publication Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds Of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill And Bajor (Worlds Of Star Trek) (No. 2), By Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti will certainly not add your mind.

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill and Bajor (Worlds of Star Trek) (No. 2), by Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill and Bajor (Worlds of Star Trek) (No. 2), by Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti



Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill and Bajor (Worlds of Star Trek) (No. 2), by Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti

Download Ebook Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill and Bajor (Worlds of Star Trek) (No. 2), by Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds Of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill And Bajor (Worlds Of Star Trek) (No. 2), By Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti. Adjustment your habit to hang or waste the moment to only talk with your close friends. It is done by your everyday, do not you really feel burnt out? Currently, we will show you the new routine that, really it's a very old habit to do that could make your life a lot more certified. When really feeling burnt out of always chatting with your buddies all leisure time, you can locate the book qualify Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds Of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill And Bajor (Worlds Of Star Trek) (No. 2), By Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti then read it.

This book Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds Of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill And Bajor (Worlds Of Star Trek) (No. 2), By Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti deals you far better of life that could develop the quality of the life better. This Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds Of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill And Bajor (Worlds Of Star Trek) (No. 2), By Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti is what individuals currently need. You are right here and you might be exact and sure to get this book Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds Of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill And Bajor (Worlds Of Star Trek) (No. 2), By Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti Never doubt to obtain it also this is merely a book. You can get this publication Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds Of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill And Bajor (Worlds Of Star Trek) (No. 2), By Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti as one of your collections. However, not the compilation to display in your shelfs. This is a valuable publication to be reviewing compilation.

Just how is making certain that this Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds Of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill And Bajor (Worlds Of Star Trek) (No. 2), By Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti will not presented in your bookshelves? This is a soft file book Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds Of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill And Bajor (Worlds Of Star Trek) (No. 2), By Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti, so you can download Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds Of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill And Bajor (Worlds Of Star Trek) (No. 2), By Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti by acquiring to get the soft documents. It will certainly relieve you to read it every single time you require. When you feel lazy to relocate the printed publication from home to office to some location, this soft data will relieve you not to do that. Considering that you can just conserve the data in your computer unit as well as device. So, it allows you read it all over you have willingness to review Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds Of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill And Bajor (Worlds Of Star Trek) (No. 2), By Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti

Well, when else will certainly you find this possibility to obtain this publication Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds Of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill And Bajor (Worlds Of Star Trek) (No. 2), By Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti soft data? This is your great chance to be here and also get this excellent publication Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds Of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill And Bajor (Worlds Of Star Trek) (No. 2), By Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti Never leave this publication prior to downloading this soft data of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds Of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill And Bajor (Worlds Of Star Trek) (No. 2), By Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti in link that we supply. Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds Of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill And Bajor (Worlds Of Star Trek) (No. 2), By Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti will really make a large amount to be your friend in your lonesome. It will certainly be the very best companion to enhance your business and pastime.

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill and Bajor (Worlds of Star Trek) (No. 2), by Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti

TRILL. The Trill are a combination of a symbiont and a host. The symbiont lives for hundreds of years in one host after another: each body is different, each personality is different, each life is different -- but all of them are one. The symbiont accumulates experiences, relationships, memories ...Andy Mangels and Michael A. Martin have set their story on this most multi-layered and extraordinary of worlds. When Trill involvement in the assassination of an allied world leader comes to light, the reason lies in the terrifying and tragic origins of the Trill -- and the answers reveal unsuspected links to other regions of the Star Trek universe. BAJOR. Political intrigue and interpersonal conflict in the style of The West Wing dominate on Deep Space Nine's core world of Bajor. The future of Bajor and the new role of long-missing Captain Benjamin Sisko are linked as this tale lays the groundwork for a major new storyline in further Deep Space Nine novels.

  • Sales Rank: #628393 in Books
  • Brand: Brand: Star Trek
  • Published on: 2005-01-25
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 1.05" h x 4.28" w x 6.70" l,
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 384 pages
Features
  • Used Book in Good Condition

About the Author
Andy Mangels is the USA Today bestselling author and coauthor of over a dozen novels -- including Star Trek and Roswell books -- all cowritten with Michael A. Martin. Flying solo, he is the bestselling author of several nonfiction books, including Star Wars: The Essential Guide to Characters and Animation on DVD: The Ultimate Guide, as well as a significant number of entries for The Superhero Book: The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Comic-Book Icons and Hollywood Heroes as well as for its companion volume, The Supervillain Book.

In addition to cowriting several more upcoming novels and contributing to anthologies, Andy has produced, directed, and scripted a series of sixteen half-hour DVD documentaries for BCI Eclipse, for inclusion in the He-Man and the Masters of the Universe DVD box sets.

Andy has written hundreds of articles for entertainment and lifestyle magazines and newspapers in the United States, England, and Italy. He has also written licensed material based on properties from numerous film studios and Microsoft, and his two decades of comic book work has been published by DC Comics, Marvel Comics, Dark Horse, Image, Innovation, and many others. He was the editor of the award-winning Gay Comics anthology for eight years.

Andy is a national award-winning activist in the Gay community, and has raised thousands of dollars for charities over the years. He lives in Portland, Oregon, with his long-term partner, Don Hood, their dog, Bela, and their chosen son, Paul Smalley. Visit his website at www.andymangels.com.

Michael A. Martin's solo short fiction has appeared in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. He has also coauthored (with Andy Mangels) several Star Trek comics for Marvel and Wildstorm and numerous Star Trek novels and eBooks, including the USA Today bestseller Titan: Book One: Taking Wing; Titan: Book Two: The Red King; the Sy Fy Genre Award-winning Star Trek: Worlds of Deep Space 9 Book Two: Trill -- Unjoined; Star Trek: The Lost Era 2298 -- The Sundered; Star Trek: Deep Space 9 Mission: Gamma: Vol. Three: Cathedral; Star Trek: The Next Generation: Section 31 -- Rogue; Star Trek: Starfleet Corps of Engineers #30 and #31 ("Ishtar Rising" Books 1 and 2); stories in the Prophecy and Change, Tales of the Dominion War, and Tales from the Captain's Table anthologies; and three novels based on the Roswell television series. His most recent novels include Enterprise: The Romulan War and Star Trek Online: The Needs of the Many.

His work has also been published by Atlas Editions (in their Star Trek Universe subscription card series), Star Trek Monthly, Dreamwatch, Grolier Books, Visible Ink Press, The Oregonian, and Gareth Stevens, Inc., for whom he has penned several World Almanac Library of the States nonfiction books for young readers. He lives with his wife, Jenny, and their two sons in Portland, Oregon.

Most helpful customer reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Bajor and Trill
By P. McCoy
I recently received this book, along with the two other "Worlds of Star Trek books, this past Saturday, March 28, 2009 and finished reading it this morning. Even though this book is labeled "Volume 2", I made it a point to look at the historian's notes in all three books and decided to begin reading the trilogy with this particular book because it was the most logical starting point, chronologically, after the events that took place in the book, "Unity".

This novel, "Worlds of Deep Space Nine: Trill and Bajor" is actually divided into two separate stories: "Unjoined" and "Fragments and Omens". The first story, "Unjoined" is based on the fourth episode of the third season of Deep Space Nine, "Equilibrium". A coverup on the Trill homeworld had been discovered by Dr. Bashir and Commander Sisko but they were persuaded to not publicly disclose what they knew. Unfortunately, for Trill, this coverup has been discovered in "Unjoined" and tragic consequences follow...which ultimately impact Dr. Bashir and his lover, Ezri Dax.

The second story, "Fragments and Omens", intertwines several episodes of Deep Space Nine including "The Visitor", which I found to be absolutely delightful! The descriptions of parenting the new Sisko baby were a source of amusement...especially the description when Benjamin realized that his daughter needed to have her diaper changed! However, this story ends on a cliffhanger involving the massacre of the Bajoran village of Sidau, (first season episode, "The Storyteller"), and the kidnapping of its Sirah. Now I have to determine which of the remaining two novels pick up where "Fragments and Omens" left off.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Not as good as the first volume,
By James Yanni
but still very good. The two stories are both very well-written, and if the first story is just depressing on several levels, and the second one focusses on a character that I have little to no interest in (Jake Sisko), as well as not providing a satisfactory ending to a major plot-point, all of that still only costs it one star. (Of course, if it had been allowed to be a full book on its own rather than sharing a book with the Trill story, perhaps the second story would have had space to FINISH rather than being forced to continue a major plot-point, but it wasn't, so it didn't.)

9 of 9 people found the following review helpful.
Just as good as the first one.
By G. Marshall
In fact, it's probably a wee bit better. When I was reviewing the first volume, I rated the Cardassia story as higher than the Andorian story because of the soap opera feel in that story, and gave that book a 4 star rating. This book is more between a 4 and 4.5 star rating. Before saying anything, i have to give kudos to all of the writers for incorporting the most random episodes from waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay back in the days of DS9 and TNG and parlaying them into important backstories for these new stories, both in this volume and in Unity and others. I'm impressed :) This version also follows the general thread of the first book, where the first story focuses more on the society than the personal characters (Trill and Cardassia) and the second one focuses on the interactions between the society and the characters (Andor and Bajor).

The Trill story is the better of the two by a nose, because it wraps up completely. It focuses on the upheavals on Trill after the events of Unity, the role of Trill in the parasite evolution and the reasons for the parasite's hatred, and it has a very strong ending with very strong repercussions for all Trill, unjoined and joined, as well as for Ezri and Julian. I liked the way the story was written and the implications of what happens to the symbiotes as they grow older (much older). I look forward to the aftermath of these events, and how it affects Trill and the Federation.

The Bajor story is a paradox. It is more interesting than the Trill story (to me) but is a cliff-hanger, and has about 3 or 4 different story threads, only half of which are resolved in this volume. While it plays a bit like the Andor story in the soap opera vein, Jake is a whole lot more sympathetic than Prynn Tenmei is. Call me biased :) The cliffhanger nature of the story reduced the enjoyment for me, 'cause now I have to wait for a while to find out what some of the loose ends were referring to, and it was a bit hard to follow all the threads, even interesting as each of them were. However, what was given was great, and it is a joy to see Capt. Sisko and his lovely baby girl, and family, and Jake and...read it and see. However, I think that this story should have been used as the basis of a novel a la Unity, rather than as a novella in this series.

All in all, I recommend it to all fans of DS9 Relaunch, and I look forward to the Dominion and Ferengrinar stories. What's after those???

See all 13 customer reviews...

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill and Bajor (Worlds of Star Trek) (No. 2), by Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti PDF
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill and Bajor (Worlds of Star Trek) (No. 2), by Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti EPub
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill and Bajor (Worlds of Star Trek) (No. 2), by Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti Doc
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill and Bajor (Worlds of Star Trek) (No. 2), by Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti iBooks
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill and Bajor (Worlds of Star Trek) (No. 2), by Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti rtf
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill and Bajor (Worlds of Star Trek) (No. 2), by Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti Mobipocket
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill and Bajor (Worlds of Star Trek) (No. 2), by Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti Kindle

~~ Download Ebook Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill and Bajor (Worlds of Star Trek) (No. 2), by Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti Doc

~~ Download Ebook Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill and Bajor (Worlds of Star Trek) (No. 2), by Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti Doc

~~ Download Ebook Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill and Bajor (Worlds of Star Trek) (No. 2), by Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti Doc
~~ Download Ebook Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Worlds of Deep Space Nine #2: Trill and Bajor (Worlds of Star Trek) (No. 2), by Andy Mangels, Michael A. Marti Doc

^ Free PDF Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), by Charles Dickens

Free PDF Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), by Charles Dickens

Investing the spare time by reading Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), By Charles Dickens could supply such great encounter also you are just sitting on your chair in the workplace or in your bed. It will not curse your time. This Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), By Charles Dickens will lead you to have even more precious time while taking rest. It is very satisfying when at the twelve noon, with a cup of coffee or tea and also an e-book Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), By Charles Dickens in your gadget or computer monitor. By enjoying the views around, here you could begin reading.

Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), by Charles Dickens

Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), by Charles Dickens



Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), by Charles Dickens

Free PDF Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), by Charles Dickens

Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), By Charles Dickens. Change your practice to hang or throw away the time to only talk with your friends. It is done by your everyday, do not you feel tired? Now, we will certainly show you the extra behavior that, in fact it's a very old behavior to do that can make your life a lot more certified. When feeling tired of constantly chatting with your buddies all downtime, you could find guide qualify Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), By Charles Dickens and after that review it.

This is why we recommend you to consistently visit this web page when you require such book Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), By Charles Dickens, every book. By online, you could not go to get the book establishment in your city. By this online collection, you could find the book that you actually wish to check out after for very long time. This Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), By Charles Dickens, as one of the suggested readings, tends to be in soft data, as all of book collections here. So, you might likewise not wait for couple of days later on to receive and also read the book Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), By Charles Dickens.

The soft data implies that you need to visit the web link for downloading and after that conserve Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), By Charles Dickens You have actually owned guide to read, you have postured this Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), By Charles Dickens It is uncomplicated as visiting the book shops, is it? After getting this quick description, ideally you can download and install one and also begin to check out Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), By Charles Dickens This book is quite simple to check out whenever you have the downtime.

It's no any kind of faults when others with their phone on their hand, and you're as well. The distinction may last on the product to open up Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), By Charles Dickens When others open up the phone for talking and speaking all points, you can sometimes open as well as review the soft data of the Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), By Charles Dickens Obviously, it's unless your phone is readily available. You can additionally make or wait in your laptop or computer that relieves you to read Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), By Charles Dickens.

Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), by Charles Dickens

Enriched Classics offer readers accessible editions of great works of literature enhanced by helpful notes and commentary. Each book includes educational tools alongside the text, enabling students and readers alike to gain a deeper and more developed understanding of the writer and their work.

Set in nineteenth-century England, Great Expectations is Dickens’s timeless tale of an orphan boy’s extraordinary journey through life.

Enriched Classics enhance your engagement by introducing and explaining the historical and cultural significance of the work, the author’s personal history, and what impact this book had on subsequent scholarship. Each book includes discussion questions that help clarify and reinforce major themes and reading recommendations for further research.

Read with confidence.

  • Sales Rank: #170900 in Books
  • Model: 1668494
  • Published on: 2004-05-01
  • Released on: 2004-05-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 6.75" h x 1.50" w x 4.19" l, 1.30 pounds
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 656 pages

Amazon.com Review
An absorbing mystery as well as a morality tale, the story of Pip, a poor village lad, and his expectations of wealth is Dickens at his most deliciously readable. The cast of characters includes kindly Joe Gargery, the loyal convict Abel Magwitch and the haunting Miss Havisham. If you have heartstrings, count on them being tugged.

From School Library Journal
Grade 7 Up—A young man's burning desire to fulfill his "great expectations" of fame and fortune is presented in Charles Dickens's classic tale of love, madness, forgiveness, and redemption. Simon Vance's masterful narration brings to life such diverse personalities as Miss Havisham, the old woman who was abandoned on her wedding day and is determined to wreak revenge through her beautiful adopted daughter Estella; Joe, Pip's lumbering and slow-witted, but emotionally wise and faithful friend; the mysterious Magwitch, a convict who turns out to be Pip's financial benefactor; and Pip, the boy who longs for a destiny greater than that of living out his days as a blacksmith's apprentice. The companion ebook features automatic start-up, keyword searching, PDF printable format, and table of contents. An exceptionally skilled rendering of this classic.—Cindy Lombardo, Cleveland Public Library, OH
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review
“Great Expectations may be called a novel without a hero . . . In [it] Dickens was really trying to be a quiet, a detached, and even a cynical observer of human life . . . And the final and startling triumph of Dickens is this: that even to this moderate and modern story he gives an incomparable energy which is not moderate and which is not modern. He is trying to be reasonable; but in spite of himself he is inspired.” –G. K. Chesterton

“Great Expectations [is] generally regarded as Dickens’s artistic masterpiece, and a novel profoundly serious in its psychological and sociological import . . . Dickens tell[s] a universal story of human passions, mutual exploitation, selfishness, self-delusion, and selflessness . . . [It] is the subtlest and most profound, as well as the most triumphantly achieved, of all his great novels.” –From the Introduction by Michael Slater

Most helpful customer reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
This was one of my favorite Reading/Language Arts book selections from my time in high ...
By Nancy Sheaffer
This was one of my favorite Reading/Language Arts book selections from my time in high school back in the 70s. I have read this story over and over again - usually every two years or so. The lesson of hopes dashed, of gratitude forgotten, of undeserved love and kindness is one that resonates today with people everywhere. Disappointment can be a lesson, worth learning.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
A Masterpiece
By MaximumSmoove
This is one of my all time favorite novels, and I think that it is Dickens' best writing. You'll fall in love with the characters, and they all feel dynamic and real. This story is about finding yourself in life, and what it means to really love. Required reading for anyone interested in classic literature.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
I liked the story but felt the ending was a little ...
By LilleyB29
An enduring classic; well written, as expected of a Dickens' novel. I liked the story but felt the ending was a little rushed; I would have liked to see it rounded out a bit more but far be it for me to critique Charles Dickens! : )

See all 1378 customer reviews...

Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), by Charles Dickens PDF
Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), by Charles Dickens EPub
Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), by Charles Dickens Doc
Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), by Charles Dickens iBooks
Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), by Charles Dickens rtf
Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), by Charles Dickens Mobipocket
Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), by Charles Dickens Kindle

^ Free PDF Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), by Charles Dickens Doc

^ Free PDF Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), by Charles Dickens Doc

^ Free PDF Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), by Charles Dickens Doc
^ Free PDF Great Expectations (Enriched Classics), by Charles Dickens Doc

Selasa, 30 Desember 2014

* Ebook Never Go Home Again: A Novel, by Shannon Holmes

Ebook Never Go Home Again: A Novel, by Shannon Holmes

Are you considering mainly publications Never Go Home Again: A Novel, By Shannon Holmes If you are still perplexed on which one of the book Never Go Home Again: A Novel, By Shannon Holmes that must be acquired, it is your time to not this website to search for. Today, you will certainly require this Never Go Home Again: A Novel, By Shannon Holmes as the most referred publication and the majority of required book as sources, in other time, you can enjoy for other publications. It will certainly rely on your ready demands. However, we consistently suggest that publications Never Go Home Again: A Novel, By Shannon Holmes can be a terrific infestation for your life.

Never Go Home Again: A Novel, by Shannon Holmes

Never Go Home Again: A Novel, by Shannon Holmes



Never Go Home Again: A Novel, by Shannon Holmes

Ebook Never Go Home Again: A Novel, by Shannon Holmes

Is Never Go Home Again: A Novel, By Shannon Holmes book your preferred reading? Is fictions? Just how's concerning history? Or is the most effective seller novel your choice to satisfy your downtime? Or even the politic or religious publications are you hunting for currently? Right here we go we offer Never Go Home Again: A Novel, By Shannon Holmes book collections that you need. Bunches of varieties of publications from numerous fields are given. From fictions to science and religious can be searched as well as discovered right here. You might not fret not to find your referred book to read. This Never Go Home Again: A Novel, By Shannon Holmes is one of them.

This publication Never Go Home Again: A Novel, By Shannon Holmes deals you far better of life that can produce the quality of the life more vibrant. This Never Go Home Again: A Novel, By Shannon Holmes is just what individuals currently need. You are below and you could be precise and also sure to get this publication Never Go Home Again: A Novel, By Shannon Holmes Never doubt to obtain it even this is merely a book. You can get this publication Never Go Home Again: A Novel, By Shannon Holmes as one of your collections. However, not the collection to display in your bookshelves. This is a priceless publication to be checking out compilation.

Just how is to make sure that this Never Go Home Again: A Novel, By Shannon Holmes will not shown in your shelfs? This is a soft documents publication Never Go Home Again: A Novel, By Shannon Holmes, so you could download Never Go Home Again: A Novel, By Shannon Holmes by acquiring to get the soft file. It will reduce you to read it every time you need. When you really feel careless to move the printed book from home to office to some place, this soft documents will certainly relieve you not to do that. Considering that you could only conserve the information in your computer hardware and gizmo. So, it allows you read it all over you have determination to read Never Go Home Again: A Novel, By Shannon Holmes

Well, when else will you find this possibility to get this book Never Go Home Again: A Novel, By Shannon Holmes soft documents? This is your great opportunity to be right here and also get this terrific publication Never Go Home Again: A Novel, By Shannon Holmes Never leave this publication before downloading this soft data of Never Go Home Again: A Novel, By Shannon Holmes in web link that we offer. Never Go Home Again: A Novel, By Shannon Holmes will really make a lot to be your friend in your lonesome. It will be the best companion to enhance your company and also pastime.

Never Go Home Again: A Novel, by Shannon Holmes

The experience and quality that I bring to my writing can't be faked. I know what I know. Through my novels, I invite readers to journey with me into the streets. Come see what I've seen. Let me show the gritty and grimy undercarriage of society, the "flip side" of the game....
-- Shannon Holmes
Inspired by the events of his own life, the Essence bestselling author of B-More Careful and Bad Girlz presents a vivid, unflinching novel about a young man's coming of age in the city streets.
Never Go Home Again is the story of Corey Dixon, a young man whose father tries as best he can to steer him away from the lure of the streets. And yet, like so many others in his neighborhood, Corey finds the lucrative drug trade too tempting to resist. While he makes fast money for a while, ultimately Corey must pay the price for his choice of his profession: his freedom. By the age of sixteen, Corey is sentenced to prison.
Incarcerated at Riker's Island, Corey lives through experiences that threaten to destroy his body, his mind, and his spirit. Still, in the midst of his horrific imprisonment, he discovers inner strength and -- against unimaginable odds -- manages to survive. Corey makes a new kind of family for himself in jail, including a teacher who encourages him to "never go home again." In the course of his journey of self-discovery, Corey comes to realize the wisdom in his mentor's words.
Unflinching and riveting, Never Go Home Again is a powerful, true-to-life story of redemption that no reader will soon forget.

  • Sales Rank: #961998 in Books
  • Brand: Atria Books
  • Published on: 2005-09-27
  • Released on: 2005-09-27
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.25" h x 1.10" w x 5.31" l, .62 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 336 pages
Features
  • Great product!

About the Author
Shannon Holmes, author of B-More Careful and Bad Girlz, is copublisher, with Vickie Stringer, of Triple Crown Publications.

Most helpful customer reviews

1 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
Just Ok
By LOCKSIE
This story about Cory Dixon, who is incarcerated as a young teen. Cory is given some good advice while in prison, but fails to follow it when he gets out. Our young male teens should take a read they may learn something from it. I was expecting something a little different from Shannon as I have enjoyed his previous books.

Locksie

ARC Book Club Inc.

12 of 14 people found the following review helpful.
Should Be Required Reading In Middle and High School
By Book 'Em Danno
I became acquainted with Shannon Holmes' writing with his debut "B-More Careful". At first I thought Shannon was a woman because of the detail about how slick the women were in the book and also there was no picture on the back of the book to show otherwise. When I found out it was a man that wrote that book my respect level went a little bit higher for Mr. Holmes. Since then he has never disappointed me with any of his books. The same holds true with "Never Go Home Again". Shannon is not playing with this writing thing and his skills just keep getting better.

"Never Go Home Again" is not your typical drug story where the male is from a single-parent home with nothing but the streets to take care of him. This book is written from the perspective of what happens to a large majority of our young black men. The main character, Corey, comes from a loving two-parent household but still gets caught up in the drug game. His parents are so busy working trying to provide a good life for him that the lure of the streets and pressure from his friends draw him in. Corey's mom and dad are not on dope, they don't beat him, and yet he still sees the fast money that can be made in the streets. You know that Corey is smart and was raised right but he just makes the wrong choices in life which lead him to an unfortunate end. This is a perfect example of people trying to raise a young black male in the best way that they know how but society says that their child's worth is different because of the color of his skin.

All I have to say is I have much love for Shannon in writing this book and think everyone should read it. This book seems to be semi-autographical of Shannon's life from what I've read about him. The difference is that Shannon chose to make a change after being in the streets and in jail with something that he thought he would never do in a million years. He chose to pick up a pen and write about the circumstances of the inner city, what the characters do to survive, and give a message of how you'll end up if you choose to make the same choices. Keep up the good work Shannon. I'm ready for "B-More Careful 2".

0 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Simply The Best
By Nothing BUT Page Turners "Book Club"
Never Go Home Again was written outside of the norm. It tells a story of a young man named Corey who has a loving mother and father and is taught to do all the right things in life, yet somehow ends up doing the total opposite.

This is not your everyday shoot 'em bang bang, thugged out novel. It actually shows the effects of the pure pressure thats placed upon our young men. Take Corey for instance. He had all the attributes to life that a young boy could have. He was taught to get an education and was taught how to be a man from a man - his father. Still, the pressures from his friends made him turn to something that would ultimately cause him more harm than good.

This book is for every young boy. Not only for those that are lost, in jail, or failing in school, but for every young boy. I would also recommend it to anyone who believes bad kids only spawn from single parents. You'll change the way you think for good after reading this. Good job Shannon.

Rolanda,

Nothing BUT Page Turners Book Club

See all 24 customer reviews...

Never Go Home Again: A Novel, by Shannon Holmes PDF
Never Go Home Again: A Novel, by Shannon Holmes EPub
Never Go Home Again: A Novel, by Shannon Holmes Doc
Never Go Home Again: A Novel, by Shannon Holmes iBooks
Never Go Home Again: A Novel, by Shannon Holmes rtf
Never Go Home Again: A Novel, by Shannon Holmes Mobipocket
Never Go Home Again: A Novel, by Shannon Holmes Kindle

* Ebook Never Go Home Again: A Novel, by Shannon Holmes Doc

* Ebook Never Go Home Again: A Novel, by Shannon Holmes Doc

* Ebook Never Go Home Again: A Novel, by Shannon Holmes Doc
* Ebook Never Go Home Again: A Novel, by Shannon Holmes Doc

Senin, 29 Desember 2014

@ Ebook Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story of an Artist, an Atrocity and a Painting That Shook the World, by Russell Martin

Ebook Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story of an Artist, an Atrocity and a Painting That Shook the World, by Russell Martin

As understood, book Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story Of An Artist, An Atrocity And A Painting That Shook The World, By Russell Martin is popular as the home window to open the globe, the life, and new point. This is just what the people now need so much. Also there are many people who don't like reading; it can be a choice as recommendation. When you really require the means to develop the following motivations, book Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story Of An Artist, An Atrocity And A Painting That Shook The World, By Russell Martin will truly direct you to the way. Moreover this Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story Of An Artist, An Atrocity And A Painting That Shook The World, By Russell Martin, you will have no regret to obtain it.

Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story of an Artist, an Atrocity and a Painting That Shook the World, by Russell Martin

Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story of an Artist, an Atrocity and a Painting That Shook the World, by Russell Martin



Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story of an Artist, an Atrocity and a Painting That Shook the World, by Russell Martin

Ebook Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story of an Artist, an Atrocity and a Painting That Shook the World, by Russell Martin

Exactly how an idea can be got? By looking at the celebrities? By checking out the sea and taking a look at the sea interweaves? Or by reading a book Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story Of An Artist, An Atrocity And A Painting That Shook The World, By Russell Martin Everybody will certainly have specific characteristic to obtain the inspiration. For you that are dying of books and constantly obtain the inspirations from publications, it is truly terrific to be below. We will show you hundreds collections of the book Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story Of An Artist, An Atrocity And A Painting That Shook The World, By Russell Martin to review. If you like this Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story Of An Artist, An Atrocity And A Painting That Shook The World, By Russell Martin, you could also take it as all yours.

When visiting take the encounter or thoughts types others, book Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story Of An Artist, An Atrocity And A Painting That Shook The World, By Russell Martin can be a good resource. It holds true. You can read this Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story Of An Artist, An Atrocity And A Painting That Shook The World, By Russell Martin as the source that can be downloaded below. The way to download and install is likewise simple. You can go to the link web page that our company offer then buy the book making a bargain. Download and install Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story Of An Artist, An Atrocity And A Painting That Shook The World, By Russell Martin and you could deposit in your very own device.

Downloading the book Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story Of An Artist, An Atrocity And A Painting That Shook The World, By Russell Martin in this website lists could give you a lot more advantages. It will certainly reveal you the very best book collections as well as completed compilations. Plenty publications can be discovered in this site. So, this is not only this Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story Of An Artist, An Atrocity And A Painting That Shook The World, By Russell Martin Nonetheless, this publication is described check out because it is an impressive publication to give you a lot more opportunity to obtain experiences and also ideas. This is easy, read the soft file of the book Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story Of An Artist, An Atrocity And A Painting That Shook The World, By Russell Martin and you get it.

Your impression of this publication Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story Of An Artist, An Atrocity And A Painting That Shook The World, By Russell Martin will certainly lead you to obtain what you precisely require. As one of the inspiring books, this book will supply the presence of this leaded Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story Of An Artist, An Atrocity And A Painting That Shook The World, By Russell Martin to gather. Even it is juts soft data; it can be your cumulative file in gizmo and various other gadget. The essential is that use this soft data book Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story Of An Artist, An Atrocity And A Painting That Shook The World, By Russell Martin to review and also take the perks. It is what we suggest as publication Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story Of An Artist, An Atrocity And A Painting That Shook The World, By Russell Martin will certainly enhance your ideas and also mind. Then, reading book will likewise enhance your life high quality better by taking good activity in well balanced.

Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story of an Artist, an Atrocity and a Painting That Shook the World, by Russell Martin

On 26 April 1937, the Basque town of Guernica in northern Spain was bombed by Hitler's Luftwaffe on behalf of Francisco Franco as he waged a bloody civil war. Twenty-four hours later, the village lay in ruins, its population decimated. This act of terror - the first large-scale attack against civilians in modern warfare - outraged the world, and one man in particular. Pablo Picasso, an expatriate living in Paris, responded to the devastation in his homeland by beginning work on GUERNICA, a painting many consider the greatest artwork of the twentieth century. Intermingling themes of politics, art, war and morality, and featuring some of the twentieth century's most memorable and infamous figures, Russell Martin follows this renowned masterpiece across decades and continents. From Europe to America and, finally, back to Spain, PICASSO'S WAR sheds light on the conflict that was an ominous prelude to World War II and delivers an unforgettable portrait of a genius whose visionary statement about the horror and terrible wounds of war still resonates today.

  • Sales Rank: #2362432 in Books
  • Published on: 2004-01-19
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 288 pages

From Publishers Weekly
Picasso watched closely from his adopted Paris as the Spanish Civil War unfolded, and when German bombers leveled the Basque village of Guernica, the previously apolitical Picasso felt stirred to action. Created at a frenzied pace, his painting Guernica was both homage to his Catalonian homeland and a scathing indictment of bloodshed. While Martin (Beethoven's Hair) meticulously describes the painting's creation and context, much of the book focuses on the controversies that haunted the canvas for decades. When Guernica was first introduced at the Spanish pavilion of the 1937 International Exposition of Art and Technology Applied to Modern Life in Paris, it was ignored by many, criticized by others for ugliness-and even for not being political enough. Later acknowledged as a classic, it was housed in New York's Museum of Modern Art, safe from the war overseas. By the '60s, voices grew stronger asking for its return to Spain, the country that had originally commissioned its creation. With Franco still in power, an aging Picasso asked that the painting go to Spain only when the country was once again free from oppression. Within this larger narrative, Martin weaves a memoir of his own trek to visit Guernica, which finally arrived in Spain in the 1980s. The culmination of this thread, when Martin coincidentally views the painting on September 11, 2001, brings the narrative into the contemporary world and highlights Guernica's brutal relevance today.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
Picasso's "Guernica" was painted in reaction to the barbarous Nazi bombing of the Basque village in Spain in 1937. Martin (Beethoven's Hair) extensively researched the circumstances surrounding the creation of this painting and the attention it has continued to command. On 9/11 he was in Madrid viewing "Guernica"; here he has collaged his response to the attacks in New York City with his feelings about the painting. In the face of such terrible loss, it may be reasonable to parallel the two horrific events; however, Martin mixes fact and opinion with his personal reminiscences. Picasso's politics were ambiguous at best; while he joined the Communist Party to please his friends after World War II, he became disillusioned with Stalin in the 1950s. Picasso said, when asked, in typical fashion, that painting was his party. "Guernica's" historical significance as possibly "the last great history painting" gets lost here, begging the question is it politics, art, or tragedy that is Martin's focus? He discusses visuals yet provides no illustrations, such as the photographs Dora Maar took of Picasso working on "Guernica" or the preparatory drawings. This effort will not satisfy the thoughtful reader, and it skimps on production. For a contrasting perspective on Picasso and "Guernica," try James Lord's Picasso and Dora. You can pass on this one. Ellen Bates, New York
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Picasso hadn't yet agreed to create a mural for Spain's pavilion in Paris' 1937 international exposition, but once news of the Nazi bombing and utter destruction of the historic Basque town of Guernica reached the expatriate Spanish artist, visions of a painting in protest of that horrific massacre of innocents quickly coalesced. The result was the immense masterpiece Guernica, which, as Martin so resoundingly chronicles, became "the world's most recognized symbol of war's brutality." Martin, the author most recently of Beethoven's Hair (2000), relates in engrossing detail the entire, never before fully documented story of the genesis, reception, and fate of Guernica, freshly considering overlooked aspects of Spain's civil war and Franco's collusion with Hitler, the ongoing struggle for Basque autonomy, and Picasso's refusal to allow Guernica to travel to Franco's Spain. Initially castigated for being too vague in its condemnation of the fascist attack, the painting's timeless and universal power soon made itself known as war erupted around the globe. Martin's poignant portrayal of Picasso and gripping history of a painting that galvanized a world assaulted by new extremes of systematic violence illuminate the complex and always provocative nexus of art, politics, and social conscience. Donna Seaman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Most helpful customer reviews

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful.
A Historic Painting's Biography
By Rob Hardy
In a small village of Spain, it was market day on 26 April 1937, with farmers bringing in harvest. The village within the Basque region of northern Spain was without any serious strategic import, but it was less than twenty miles away from Bilbao, a Basque stronghold, and Francisco Franco wished to threaten the Basques. At the request of Franco's rebel army, Luftwaffe planes poured bombs, percussion and incendiary, onto the village for three hours, and strafed the people trying to flee. The event was to inspire possibly the most famous painting of the twentieth century, and the painting was to sear the events in Guernica into the world's memory. The story of the history that made the painting and the painting that made history is dramatically told in _Picasso's War: The Destruction of Guernica, and the Masterpiece that Changed the World_ (Dutton) by Russell Martin. It is a great story of art and history, and it is told here with earnest verve.
Picasso didn't like the idea of a commission for a big mural, and although he fully supported the Spanish Republican forces in their efforts against Franco's fascism, he was not interested in making what he knew would be a piece of propaganda. He had never visited the Basque country, but once he heard of the attack, he began sketches for the commission. It was not immediately accepted as a masterpiece, although the partisans of the Spanish Republican cause were, of course, enthusiastic. It wound up at the commencement of World War II in New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, where it would be a showpiece for more than forty years. Picasso made clear that the Spanish Republican government had paid for the painting and it thus belonged to the people of a democratic Spain, but he stipulated that democracy and freedom had to be restored before it returned. After Franco's death, and after serious legal tangles, possibly because the museum wanted to hold on to the painting as long as possible, the painting was sent to the Prado museum in Madrid in 1981. The national newspaper had the headline THE WAR HAS ENDED.
That might have been so, but controversy over the painting and the locale it deserves has not ended. It was moved to another Madrid museum, probably its permanent home, but many Basques believe that it needs to be closer to the rebuilt Guernica village. Hope for such a move peaked when the Bilbao museum was built. The architect, Frank Gehry, even showed the Spanish king and queen the wall on which _Guernica_ should be installed. Having the painting return to Spain helped to heal the years of repression, and perhaps sending it to Bilbao would heal the wounds between Basques and Spaniards; it is not impossible that the famous painting still has work to do. But Martin reminds us that Picasso said, "Wars end, but hostilities endure forever." Martin was researching his fine book, and looking at the painting himself, when other museum visitors hinted that as an American he ought to get to a television. It was 11 September 2001, and the world has not fully learned _Guernica_'s lesson.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
A Gripping Account Of Guernica - The Bombing & The Mural
By Jana L.Perskie
On April 26, 1937, 100 aircraft of the German Luftwaffe's Legion Condor conducted a three hour bombing attack on the city of Guernica, a small Basque town, then held by the Loyalist Republican Army. The Germans were pressured into conducting the attack by Francisco Franco, the Spanish rebel leader. Guernica was approximately 10 miles behind the front lines and was crowded with retreating soldiers and refugees. The day was the normal market day for the town and surrounding area. Local citizens crowded the marketplace, doing their weekly shopping.
Two-thirds of the of the explosives dropped by the German bombers were 500 and 250 kilogram high explosive bombs and 20 pound anti-personnel bombs; one-third were 2 pound incendiary bombs. Approximately 1,654 people may have been killed and another 889 wounded in the attack. Reports indicate as much as 70 percent of the town was destroyed, with most of the rest heavily damaged. Fires ignited during the attack are reported to have burned for three days. Guernica fell to General Francisco Franco's advancing army two days later.
From his home in Paris, Pablo Picasso, Spanish artist and master painter, translated the shock, horror, sorrow and outrage he shared with his fellow countrymen and most of the world's people, into a gigantic black and white mural he titled Guernica.
Russell Martin tells the complete story of Guernica, starting with the events that lead to the creation of the painting and following Guernica as it moved from museum to museum, becoming ever more the important symbol it has become today - and one of the 20th century's greatest masterpieces. Martin examines Spain under Franco's fascist regime, the storied private life of Picasso, the messages of protest within the painting, and the controversy that surrounded Guernica.
This painting symbolizes all that is horrible and evil in war, and the resulting suffering that occurs in wars everywhere. "Picasso's War" has been named a Book Sense 76 selection of the US Association of Independent Booksellers. It is extremely well written and fascinating - educational, critical and very personal. I cannot recommend it highly enough.
JANA

13 of 13 people found the following review helpful.
Great Read -- Great History?
By A Customer
Russell Martin has taken the history of the Spanish Civil War and a single work of art an woven them together into an entertaining and enlightening book. I am disturbed, however, by the author's Bibliographical Note, which begins "This narrative is intended for general readers rather than scholars, and for that reason I have chosen not to cite sources in the text or in accompanying notes. But I will be pleased to answer queries directed to me through the publisher about specific sources...." The author claims a great deal of detailed knowledge, from time to time stating with authority how Picasso felt in particular situations. It would be nice, even for a general reader, to know whether these conclusions were based on letters or interviews or the author's supposition...

See all 19 customer reviews...

Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story of an Artist, an Atrocity and a Painting That Shook the World, by Russell Martin PDF
Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story of an Artist, an Atrocity and a Painting That Shook the World, by Russell Martin EPub
Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story of an Artist, an Atrocity and a Painting That Shook the World, by Russell Martin Doc
Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story of an Artist, an Atrocity and a Painting That Shook the World, by Russell Martin iBooks
Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story of an Artist, an Atrocity and a Painting That Shook the World, by Russell Martin rtf
Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story of an Artist, an Atrocity and a Painting That Shook the World, by Russell Martin Mobipocket
Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story of an Artist, an Atrocity and a Painting That Shook the World, by Russell Martin Kindle

@ Ebook Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story of an Artist, an Atrocity and a Painting That Shook the World, by Russell Martin Doc

@ Ebook Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story of an Artist, an Atrocity and a Painting That Shook the World, by Russell Martin Doc

@ Ebook Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story of an Artist, an Atrocity and a Painting That Shook the World, by Russell Martin Doc
@ Ebook Picasso's War: The Extraordinary Story of an Artist, an Atrocity and a Painting That Shook the World, by Russell Martin Doc

@ Download Ebook The Taming of the Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare

Download Ebook The Taming of the Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare

The soft documents indicates that you should visit the web link for downloading and install and after that save The Taming Of The Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare You have actually owned guide to review, you have actually posed this The Taming Of The Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare It is uncomplicated as visiting guide stores, is it? After getting this short description, hopefully you could download one as well as begin to review The Taming Of The Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare This book is really easy to review every time you have the downtime.

The Taming of the Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare

The Taming of the Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare



The Taming of the Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare

Download Ebook The Taming of the Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare

This is it the book The Taming Of The Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare to be best seller lately. We give you the most effective deal by getting the stunning book The Taming Of The Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare in this website. This The Taming Of The Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare will certainly not only be the sort of book that is tough to discover. In this site, all sorts of publications are offered. You can search title by title, author by writer, as well as author by publisher to learn the best book The Taming Of The Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare that you could read currently.

This publication The Taming Of The Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare offers you far better of life that can create the high quality of the life brighter. This The Taming Of The Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare is exactly what the people currently require. You are right here and also you could be precise as well as certain to get this book The Taming Of The Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare Never ever doubt to get it even this is simply a publication. You could get this book The Taming Of The Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare as one of your collections. Yet, not the compilation to present in your shelfs. This is a priceless publication to be checking out compilation.

How is making certain that this The Taming Of The Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare will not shown in your shelfs? This is a soft documents book The Taming Of The Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare, so you could download The Taming Of The Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare by acquiring to obtain the soft documents. It will alleviate you to read it each time you require. When you feel lazy to move the published book from the home of office to some location, this soft documents will certainly alleviate you not to do that. Due to the fact that you could only conserve the data in your computer hardware as well as device. So, it enables you read it everywhere you have desire to review The Taming Of The Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare

Well, when else will you locate this possibility to get this book The Taming Of The Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare soft documents? This is your excellent chance to be below and get this wonderful publication The Taming Of The Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare Never leave this publication before downloading this soft file of The Taming Of The Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare in link that we offer. The Taming Of The Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare will really make a lot to be your friend in your lonely. It will certainly be the most effective partner to improve your company and also leisure activity.

The Taming of the Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare

Love and marriage are the concerns of Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew. Lucentio’s marriage to Bianca is prompted by his idealized love of an apparently ideal woman. Petruchio’s wooing of Katherine, however, is free of idealism. Petruchio takes money from Bianca’s suitors to woo her, since Katherine must marry before her sister by her father’s decree; he also arranges the dowry with her father. Petruchio is then ready to marry Katherine, even against her will.

Katherine, the shrew of the play’s title, certainly acts much changed. But have she and Petruchio learned to love each other? Or is the marriage based on terror and deception?

The authoritative edition of The Taming of the Shrew from The Folger Shakespeare Library, the trusted and widely used Shakespeare series for students and general readers, includes:

-Freshly edited text based on the best early printed version of the play

-Newly revised explanatory notes conveniently placed on pages facing the text of the play

-Scene-by-scene plot summaries

-A key to the play’s famous lines and phrases

-An introduction to reading Shakespeare’s language

-An essay by a leading Shakespeare scholar providing a modern perspective on the play

-Fresh images from the Folger Shakespeare Library’s vast holdings of rare books

-An up-to-date annotated guide to further reading

Essay by Karen Newman

The Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, DC, is home to the world’s largest collection of Shakespeare’s printed works, and a magnet for Shakespeare scholars from around the globe. In addition to exhibitions open to the public throughout the year, the Folger offers a full calendar of performances and programs. For more information, visit Folger.edu.

  • Sales Rank: #11232 in Books
  • Brand: Simon & Schuster
  • Model: 1668404
  • Published on: 2004-01-01
  • Released on: 2004-01-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 6.75" h x .80" w x 4.19" l, .34 pounds
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 304 pages
Features
  • Great product!

About the Author
William Shakespeare was born in April 1564 in the town of Stratford-upon-Avon, on England’s Avon River. When he was eighteen, he married Anne Hathaway. The couple had three children—an older daughter Susanna and twins, Judith and Hamnet. Hamnet, Shakespeare’s only son, died in childhood. The bulk of Shakespeare’s working life was spent in the theater world of London, where he established himself professionally by the early 1590s. He enjoyed success not only as a playwright and poet, but also as an actor and shareholder in an acting company. Although some think that sometime between 1610 and 1613 Shakespeare retired from the theater and returned home to Stratford, where he died in 1616, others believe that he may have continued to work in London until close to his death.

Barbara A. Mowat is Director of Research emerita at the Folger Shakespeare Library, Consulting Editor of Shakespeare Quarterly, and author of The Dramaturgy of Shakespeare’s Romances and of essays on Shakespeare’s plays and their editing.

Paul Werstine is Professor of English at the Graduate School and at King’s University College at Western University. He is a general editor of the New Variorum Shakespeare and author of Early Modern Playhouse Manuscripts and the Editing of Shakespeare and of many papers and articles on the printing and editing of Shakespeare’s plays.

Most helpful customer reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
It's Shakespeare; who are we to critique the writing?
By BKW
It's Shakespeare; who are we to critique the writing?

Although it's been more than 40 years since I graduated with a degree in English and I've retired from a non-literary career in government, I still read Shakespeare on a regular basis. I'm updating my collection with volumes that will fit into my backpack for travel. This edition meets my needs perfectly.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
meh
By Aya
Read it for school, wouldn't read it outside of that. Meh. I was bored and the characters were boring and annoying. Too much 15th century for my progressive heart.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
So funny. I watched it with the play online
By Sierra
This was my fav play. So funny. I watched it with the play online. Hilarious!!

See all 177 customer reviews...

The Taming of the Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare PDF
The Taming of the Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare EPub
The Taming of the Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Doc
The Taming of the Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare iBooks
The Taming of the Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare rtf
The Taming of the Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Mobipocket
The Taming of the Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Kindle

@ Download Ebook The Taming of the Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Doc

@ Download Ebook The Taming of the Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Doc

@ Download Ebook The Taming of the Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Doc
@ Download Ebook The Taming of the Shrew (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Doc

Selasa, 23 Desember 2014

> Ebook The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare

Ebook The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare

Well, when else will you discover this prospect to get this publication The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare soft documents? This is your great opportunity to be right here as well as get this wonderful publication The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare Never ever leave this book before downloading this soft data of The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare in link that we supply. The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare will really make a lot to be your buddy in your lonesome. It will be the most effective partner to boost your business and hobby.

The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare

The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare



The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare

Ebook The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare

The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare. A task might obligate you to always improve the expertise and encounter. When you have no sufficient time to improve it directly, you can obtain the encounter as well as understanding from reading guide. As everyone recognizes, publication The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare is preferred as the window to open up the globe. It means that reviewing book The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare will certainly provide you a new method to locate everything that you need. As the book that we will provide here, The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare

Presents currently this The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare as one of your book collection! Yet, it is not in your bookcase collections. Why? This is guide The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare that is offered in soft file. You could download and install the soft data of this spectacular book The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare currently and in the link supplied. Yeah, different with the other people which search for book The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare outside, you could obtain easier to posture this book. When some people still stroll right into the store and browse the book The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare, you are right here just remain on your seat as well as get guide The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare.

While the other people in the establishment, they are not exactly sure to discover this The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare straight. It might need more times to go establishment by store. This is why we intend you this site. We will provide the very best means and also reference to get the book The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare Also this is soft documents book, it will be ease to carry The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare anywhere or save at home. The distinction is that you could not need move the book The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare location to location. You might require only duplicate to the various other tools.

Currently, reading this amazing The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare will certainly be much easier unless you obtain download the soft documents below. Merely right here! By clicking the link to download and install The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare, you can start to obtain the book for your personal. Be the initial owner of this soft data book The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare Make difference for the others and also get the first to advance for The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare Here and now!

The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare

Putting romance onstage, The Tempest gives us a magician, Prospero, a former duke of Milan who was displaced by his treacherous brother, Antonio. Prospero is exiled on an island, where his only companions are his daughter, Miranda, the spirit Ariel, and the monster Caliban. When his enemies are among those caught in a storm near the island, Prospero turns his power upon them through Ariel and other spirits.

The characters exceed the roles of villains and heroes. Prospero seems heroic, yet he enslaves Caliban and has an appetite for revenge. Caliban seems to be a monster for attacking Miranda, but appears heroic in resisting Prospero, evoking the period of colonialism during which the play was written. Miranda’s engagement to Ferdinand, the Prince of Naples and a member of the shipwrecked party, helps resolve the drama.

The authoritative edition of The Tempest from The Folger Shakespeare Library, the trusted and widely used Shakespeare series for students and general readers, includes:

-Freshly edited text based on the best early printed version of the play

-Full explanatory notes conveniently placed on pages facing the text of the play

-Scene-by-scene plot summaries

-A key to the play’s famous lines and phrases

-An introduction to reading Shakespeare’s language

-An essay by a leading Shakespeare scholar providing a modern perspective on the play

-Fresh images from the Folger Shakespeare Library’s vast holdings of rare books

-An annotated guide to further reading

Essay by Barbara A. Mowat

The Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, DC, is home to the world’s largest collection of Shakespeare’s printed works, and a magnet for Shakespeare scholars from around the globe. In addition to exhibitions open to the public throughout the year, the Folger offers a full calendar of performances and programs. For more information, visit Folger.edu.

  • Sales Rank: #6375 in Books
  • Brand: Simon & Schuster
  • Model: 1668443
  • Published on: 2004-07-01
  • Released on: 2004-07-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 6.75" h x .90" w x 4.19" l, .29 pounds
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 218 pages
Features
  • Great product!

Review
'a fascinating, challenging and highly original volume' Cahiers Elisabethians

'Stephen Orgel is an inspired choice as editor of this play ... he produces a clean, modestly innovative text with brisk, informative annotation ... wide ranging, speculative introduction' Martin Butler, University of Leeds, Notes and Queries

From the Publisher
Founded in 1906 by J.M. Dent, the Everyman Library has always tried to make the best books ever written available to the greatest number of people at the lowest possible price. Unique editorial features that help Everyman Paperback Classics stand out from the crowd include: a leading scholar or literary critic's introduction to the text, a biography of the author, a chronology of her or his life and times, a historical selection of criticism, and a concise plot summary. All books published since 1993 have also been completely restyled: all type has been reset, to offer a clarity and ease of reading unique among editions of the classics; a vibrant, full-color cover design now complements these great texts with beautiful contemporary works of art. But the best feature must be Everyman's uniquely low price. Each Everyman title offers these extensive materials at a price that competes with the most inexpensive editions on the market-but Everyman Paperbacks have durable binding, quality paper, and the highest editorial and scholarly standards.

From the Inside Flap
This joyous play, the last comedy of Shakespeare's career, sums up his stagecraft with a display of seemingly effortless skill. Prospero, exiled Duke of Milan, living on an enchanted island, has the opportunity to punish and forgive his enemies when he raises a tempest that drives them ashore--as well as to forestall a rebellion, to arrange the meeting of his daughter, Miranda, with an eminently suitable young prince, and, more important, to relinquish his magic powers in recognition of his advancing age. Richly filled with music and magic, romance and comedy, the play's theme of love and reconciliation offers a splendid feast for the senses and the heart.

Most helpful customer reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Tempest in a Teapot
By J. Lawson
I have read the Tempest twice before, once as a teen-ager, once in college and now, in my retirement. I thought I understood the play as a teenager, did not understand it in college and really loved the play with the help of the footnotes in this edition. It brought home the humor as well as the pathos of questions of relationships with family members, the relationships between characters with different levels of social status, questions of loyalty and revenge and other examples of human behavior, even when some of the characters may not be human. Highly recommended.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Four Stars
By sheron
Made it easy for me to understand the wording in the book

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
It was a fairly easy read with a steady pace
By Amazon Customer
I needed this book for a college class. It was a fairly easy read with a steady pace, but some of the language was difficult to understand because it is in Shakespearean English. Good quality and arrived on time.

See all 251 customer reviews...

The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare PDF
The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare EPub
The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Doc
The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare iBooks
The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare rtf
The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Mobipocket
The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Kindle

> Ebook The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Doc

> Ebook The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Doc

> Ebook The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Doc
> Ebook The Tempest (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Doc

>> Ebook Download Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare

Ebook Download Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare

By saving Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare in the device, the means you check out will also be much easier. Open it and also start checking out Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare, straightforward. This is reason why we suggest this Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare in soft file. It will certainly not disrupt your time to obtain the book. In addition, the online heating and cooling unit will certainly likewise reduce you to browse Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare it, also without going someplace. If you have link internet in your workplace, residence, or gadget, you could download Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare it straight. You might not also wait to receive the book Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare to send out by the vendor in other days.

Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare

Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare



Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare

Ebook Download Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare

Exceptional Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare book is consistently being the most effective buddy for investing little time in your office, night time, bus, and everywhere. It will certainly be a great way to merely look, open, and also read the book Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare while in that time. As recognized, encounter as well as skill do not consistently had the much cash to get them. Reading this publication with the title Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare will allow you recognize a lot more things.

If you ally need such a referred Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare book that will certainly provide you value, get the best vendor from us currently from lots of prominent authors. If you intend to entertaining publications, lots of novels, story, jokes, as well as much more fictions compilations are likewise launched, from best seller to one of the most current launched. You might not be perplexed to enjoy all book collections Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare that we will certainly provide. It is not concerning the prices. It has to do with what you need currently. This Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare, as one of the best sellers right here will certainly be one of the right options to read.

Discovering the best Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare publication as the ideal need is sort of lucks to have. To start your day or to end your day at night, this Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare will appertain enough. You could just search for the floor tile right here as well as you will certainly obtain the book Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare referred. It will not trouble you to cut your valuable time to opt for purchasing publication in store. This way, you will certainly additionally spend money to pay for transport as well as other time invested.

By downloading the online Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare book here, you will certainly get some advantages not to choose the book establishment. Simply link to the web as well as begin to download the page link we discuss. Now, your Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare is ready to appreciate reading. This is your time and also your tranquility to obtain all that you want from this book Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), By William Shakespeare

Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare

Henry IV, Part 2 is the only Shakespeare play that is a “sequel,” in the modern sense, to an earlier play of his. Like most sequels, it repeats many elements from the previous work, Henry IV, Part 1. This play again puts on stage Henry IV’s son, Prince Hal, who continues to conceal his potential greatness by consorting with tavern dwellers, including the witty Sir John Falstaff.

As in Part 1, Prince Hal and Falstaff seek to best each other in conversation, while Falstaff tries to ingratiate himself with Hal and Hal disdains him. Part 2 adds some fresh characters, the rural justices Shallow and Silence and Shallow’s household. Political rebellion, while important to the plot, does not loom as large as in Part 1. There are no glorious champions; combat is replaced by deception, cunning, and treachery.

The authoritative edition of Henry IV, Part 2 from The Folger Shakespeare Library, the trusted and widely used Shakespeare series for students and general readers, includes:

-Freshly edited text based on the best early printed version of the play
-Full explanatory notes conveniently placed on pages facing the text of the play
-Scene-by-scene plot summaries
-A key to the play’s famous lines and phrases
-An introduction to reading Shakespeare’s language
-An essay by a leading Shakespeare scholar providing a modern perspective on the play
-Fresh images from the Folger Shakespeare Library’s vast holdings of rare books
-An annotated guide to further reading

Essay by A. R. Braunmuller

The Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, DC, is home to the world’s largest collection of Shakespeare’s printed works, and a magnet for Shakespeare scholars from around the globe. In addition to exhibitions open to the public throughout the year, the Folger offers a full calendar of performances and programs. For more information, visit Folger.edu.

  • Sales Rank: #97588 in Books
  • Brand: Shakespeare, William/ Mowat, Barbara A. (EDT)/ Werstine, Paul (EDT)
  • Model: 1668478
  • Published on: 2006-01-01
  • Released on: 2006-01-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 6.75" h x 1.00" w x 4.19" l, .45 pounds
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 400 pages

Review
`The text pages clearly differentiate text, collation, and notes; the documentation is full but inconspicuous; and it has been well proof-read ... Dr Weis provides an economical but illuminating discussion of Shakespeare's sources ... The annotations throughout are lucid and economical, responsive to both levels of plot. ... Rene Weis's edition can be recommended as a thoughtful and sensitive response to the play, which ranks alongside the outstanding 1966 New Arden edition by R A Humphreys.' Brian Vickers, ROES, vol 50 no 200 (1999)

From the Publisher
The stirring continuation of the themes begun in Henry IV, Part One again pits a rebellion within the State and that master of misrule, Falstaff, against the maturing of Prince Hal. Alternating scenes between bawdy tavern and regal court, between revelry and politics, Shakespeare probes at the sources, uses, and responsibilities of power as an old king dies and a young king must choose between a ruler's solemn duty and a merry but dissipated friend, Falstaff. The play represents Shakespeare at the peak of his maturity in writing historical drama and comedy.

From the Inside Flap
The stirring continuation of the themes begun in "Henry IV, Part One again pits a rebellion within the State and that master of misrule, Falstaff, against the maturing of Prince Hal. Alternating scenes between bawdy tavern and regal court, between revelry and politics, Shakespeare probes at the sources, uses, and responsibilities of power as an old king dies and a young king must choose between a ruler's solemn duty and a merry but dissipated friend, Falstaff. The play represents Shakespeare at the peak of his maturity in writing historical drama and comedy.

Most helpful customer reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Thorough - great notes constantly referencing quarto and folio - you do ...
By Conrad Cecil
Thorough - great notes constantly referencing quarto and folio - you do not feel like things are being silently edited away. The Arden standards are good here. Nice job!

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Exellent edition
By L. J. McLeod-Warrick
The Foger Library publishes excellent editions of Shakespeare's works. The facing page lists definitions of unfamiliar words and explainations of unusual sentence constructions. It is an excellent edition for students.

4 of 6 people found the following review helpful.
My student were never so happy
By Trent M. Nicholson
...as when I told them about this book. It makes both content and context much easier. They understand what is being said and why it is important. I recommend this series to anyone studying Shakespeare. It cuts through all the language barriers and leaves you with and easily understandable text.

See all 86 customer reviews...

Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare PDF
Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare EPub
Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Doc
Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare iBooks
Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare rtf
Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Mobipocket
Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Kindle

>> Ebook Download Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Doc

>> Ebook Download Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Doc

>> Ebook Download Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Doc
>> Ebook Download Henry IV, Part II (Folger Shakespeare Library), by William Shakespeare Doc

Jumat, 19 Desember 2014

^^ Ebook Free Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press

Ebook Free Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press

By soft data of the book Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press to review, you might not should bring the thick prints everywhere you go. Whenever you have going to review Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press, you could open your device to review this publication Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press in soft file system. So simple as well as fast! Checking out the soft file e-book Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press will give you simple way to review. It could also be much faster because you could review your book Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press all over you desire. This online Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press can be a referred e-book that you can appreciate the remedy of life.

Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press

Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press



Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press

Ebook Free Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press

Just how a concept can be obtained? By looking at the superstars? By going to the sea and looking at the sea interweaves? Or by checking out a publication Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press Everybody will certainly have specific characteristic to acquire the motivation. For you that are dying of publications and also still get the motivations from books, it is truly terrific to be below. We will reveal you hundreds compilations of guide Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press to review. If you such as this Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press, you could additionally take it as all yours.

As recognized, lots of people state that publications are the vinyl windows for the globe. It doesn't suggest that buying book Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press will indicate that you could buy this world. Merely for joke! Reading a book Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press will opened up a person to believe far better, to maintain smile, to delight themselves, and also to motivate the understanding. Every e-book likewise has their characteristic to affect the visitor. Have you understood why you review this Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press for?

Well, still puzzled of exactly how to get this e-book Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press right here without going outside? Merely connect your computer or gadget to the net and begin downloading and install Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press Where? This web page will show you the web link web page to download Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press You never ever stress, your favourite book will certainly be faster yours now. It will certainly be a lot easier to enjoy reading Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press by on the internet or obtaining the soft file on your gadget. It will no concern which you are as well as just what you are. This e-book Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press is written for public as well as you are among them which can take pleasure in reading of this publication Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press

Investing the extra time by checking out Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press could provide such terrific experience also you are just sitting on your chair in the workplace or in your bed. It will not curse your time. This Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press will assist you to have more precious time while taking rest. It is very satisfying when at the midday, with a cup of coffee or tea and also a publication Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology For A New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press in your gizmo or computer monitor. By delighting in the sights around, right here you can begin checking out.

Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press

Thirty years after Robin Morgan's groundbreaking anthology, Sisterhood Is Powerful -- named by The American Librarians' Association one of "The 100 Most Influential Books of the Twentieth Century" -- comes this landmark new collection for the twenty-first century.
Sisterhood Is Forever -- with over 60 original essays Morgan commissioned from well-known feminist leaders plus energetic Gen X and Y activists -- is a composite mural of the female experience in America: where we've been, where we are, where we're going. The stunning scope of topics ranges from reproductive, health, and environmental issues to workplace inequities and the economics of women's unpaid labor; from globalization to the politics of aging; from cyberspace, violence against women, and electoral politics to spirituality, the law, the media, and academia. The deliberately audacious mix of contributors spans different generations, races, ethnicities, and sexual preferences: CEOs, housewives, rock stars, farmers, scientists, prostituted women, politicians, women in prison, firefighters, disability activists, artists, flight attendants, an army general, an astronaut, an anchorwoman, even a pair of teens who edit a girls' magazine. Each article celebrates the writer's personal voice -- her humor, passion, anger, and the integrity of her perspective -- while offering the latest data on women's status, political analysis, new "how-to" tools for activism, and visionary yet practical strategies for the future -- strategies needed now more than ever. Robin Morgan's own contributions are everything her readers expect: prophetic, powerfully argued, unsentimentally lyrical. From her introduction: "The book you hold in your hands is a tool for the future -- a future also in your hands." •
Edna Acosta-Belén • Carol J. Adams • Margot Adler • Natalie Angier • Ellen Appel-Bronstein • Mary Baird • Brenda Berkman • Christine E. Bose • Kathy Boudin • Ellen Bravo • Vednita Carter • Wendy Chavkin • Kimberlé Crenshaw • Gail Dines • Paula DiPerna • Helen Drusine • Andrea Dworkin • Eve Ensler • Barbara Findlen • Mary Foley • Patricia Friend • Theresa Funiciello • Carol Gilligan • Sara K. Gould • Ana Grossman The Guerrilla Girls • Beverly Guy-Sheftall • Kathleen Hanna • Laura Hershey • Anita Hill • Florence Howe • Donna M. Hughes • Karla Jay • Mae C. Jemison • Carol Jenkins • Claudia J. Kennedy • Alice Kessler-Harris Clara Sue Kidwell • Frances Kissling • Sandy Lerner • Suzanne Braun Levine • Barbara Macdonald • Catharine A. MacKinnon Jane Roland Martin • Debra Michals • Robin Morgan Jessica Neuwirth • Judy Norsigian • Eleanor Holmes Norton • Grace Paley • Emma Peters-Axtell Cynthia Rich Amy Richards • Cecile Richards Carolyn Sachs • Marianne Schnall • Pat Schroeder • Patricia Silverthorn • Eleanor Smeal Roslyn D. Smith Gloria Steinem Mary Thom • Jasmine Victoria • Faye Wattleton • Marie Wilson • Helen Zia

  • Sales Rank: #744211 in Books
  • Brand: Brand: Washington Square Press
  • Published on: 2003-03-05
  • Released on: 2003-03-05
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.25" h x 1.70" w x 6.12" l, 1.55 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 640 pages
Features
  • Used Book in Good Condition

From Publishers Weekly
This book, the third in an anthology series on women's history and feminism (after 1970's Sisterhood Is Powerful and 1984's Sisterhood Is Global), is as multifaceted and compelling as the issues it explores. Theorist, activist and writer Morgan begins and ends the hefty tome with her own vibrant writing: a stirring introduction and concluding letters to "vintage feminists" and "younger women" alike about their role in protecting and expanding their rights. The bulk of the book is a collection of some 60 essays-some factual and scholarly, others narrative and poignant-addressing women's issues from a wide scope of angles. There's a piece by Gloria Steinem about how antifeminism plays itself out in the media, a rousing cry to end sexual harassment by Anita Hill and a meditation on women's role in farming and agriculture by Carolyn Sachs. Beverly Guy-Sheftall writes on the legacy of black feminism; Natalie Angier stresses that feminism and its impulses are "part of human nature"; and Eve Ensler sings the praises of theater as "a sacred home for women." Morgan wisely offers commentary from liberal and conservative feminists alike, and her book is a smart, telling testament to how far women have come and where they will go.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Biologically Correct

Natalie Angier

In all my years as a science writer, I've sought to encourage friends, relatives, and other members of the laity not to be so afraid of science. Science doesn't belong only to scientists, I've exhorted, any more than art belongs only to artists, or politics to the Eeyores and Dumbos of Washington, D.C. Science is the property of the human race. It's one of our greatest achievements, and it doesn't take nearly as much effort as nonscientists believe to become reasonably literate in a particular discipline, to the point where you may even venture an opinion on, say, the rights of a U.S. consumer to drive an SUV, global warming be damned, versus the rights of a citizen of Bangladesh to continue living above sea level.

But I'm afraid that when it comes to my most cherished of subjects, evolutionary biology, the concept of scientific populism has been taken too far. It seems practically everybody is now an amateur Darwinist, willing to speculate grandly on the deep Plio-Pleistocene origins of all modern vices known to man, woman, or Tony Soprano. Lawyers bring evolutionary reasoning into the courtroom. Psychologists discuss the evolutionary basis of depression, neuroticism, anorexia, alcoholism, a wicked sweet tooth. Theologians insist the human brain evolved to believe in god, who may or may not return the favor by believing in evolution.

Now, I don't believe evolution is a "theory," any more than I believe gravity and the second law of thermodynamics are theories. I consider myself a Darwinist right down to my DNA, which I'm happy to share 98.5 percent of with our cousins, the chimpanzees. But it's one thing to revel in Darwin's magnificent, overarching theory of evolution by natural selection, and another to play Spin-the-HMS Beagle of a Saturday night and call the results "science." Yet to my disgust and occasionally crippling sense of despair, many of the slap-happy, data-free Darwinesque theory-ettes to emerge in recent years have been widely dispensed and accepted, to the point where they, too, are considered the biological equivalents of E=MC2. And nowhere has the acceptance of evolution-tinged notions been greater, more credulous, and more insidious than for those purporting to explain the supposed differences between the sexes. Darwinophiles, particularly the subspecies who label themselves "evolutionary psychologists," love to talk about the gulf that separates men and women. Everywhere I turn, there they are: thematic variations of the dreary old ditty, "Higgamus hoggamus/women are monogamous; hoggamus, higgamus/men are polygamous." Or, in another mildewed rendering: men are ardent, women coy. Or how about: men want quantity, women quality. Or take that: men want sex, women want love. Evolutionary psychology has newly proved old verities to be true. Not necessarily with data, mind you -- how much data do you need to prove the obvious? -- but with nifty new theoretical constructs and sufficiently high jargon-wattage terminology to lend a spangle of rigor to the field.

For example, evolutionary psychologists (evo psychos) love to talk about "mental modules," little cerebral fiefdoms that supposedly operate independently and subliminally to prevent us from behaving in the rational, integrated, thoughtful manner that we deluded femi-Nazi types might strive to accomplish. As a result of these finely honed modules, which evo psychos liken to the separate tools in a Swiss army knife, we will do things that may seem illogical and even counterproductive to our lives overall -- say, by choosing a dumb mate just because he's tall or she has big breasts and our "mate-finding" module sees the person as a bearer of good genes or a fecund womb, thus the best tool for the job of reproducing. So what if our intellectual or kinship-bonding modules disapprove of what our mate-finding module brought home? And so what if there is as yet no evidence for the existence of these mental modules? Evo psychos also emphasize the "differential reproductive potential" between men and women, transmutating the numeric discrepancy between a man's sperm cells and a woman's egg cells into any and all sex-linked inequities you care to mention: the rarity of female CEOs or Nobel laureates; the spareness of the average female's salary; the disparity in gumption, motion, get-up-and-go-tion.

No longer are the "evolved" differences between men and women presumed hypothetical until proven actual, as they might have been as recently as the early 1990s; now they are pretty much post-factual. For example, in his essay "The End of Courtship," bioethicist Leon Kass (chosen by President George W. Bush to head a national bioethics advisory panel), quotes the tired hoggamus doggerel, declaring -- without apology, footnote, or citation -- that "Ogden Nash had it right." (Memo to Kass: the verse was written by William James.) This keeper of the nation's moral compass asserts that a "natural obstacle" to courtship and marriage is "the deeply ingrained, natural waywardness and unruliness of the human male." One can make a "good case," Kass continues, "that biblical religion is, not least, an attempt to domesticate male sexuality and male erotic longings," although how good a case depends on whether you consider an Old Testament hero like King Solomon, who had 700 wives and 300 concubines, to be an exemplar of domesticated masculinity. As for modern women, Kass pities us as we hop unnaturally from bed to uncommitted bed, "living their most fertile years neither in the homes of their fathers nor their husbands." Far from enjoying "sexual liberation," he says, we are awash in quiet desperation, "unprotected, lonely, and out of sync with their inborn nature."

Apart from the general yuckiness of Kass's aspartame-tainted nostalgia, I wouldn't mind terribly if such self-styled neo-Darwinists restricted their pontificating to insisting that men are, on average, more sexually rapacious and prone to philandering than women. I don't believe that claim, and in fact some evidence indicates otherwise: while performing routine prenatal screening tests for the presence of disease genes, genetic counselors have found incidentally that anywhere from

5 to 15 percent of babies are fathered by somebody other than the mother's husband -- and surely not all these women were forced against their "inborn nature" into adulterous copulations.

Nevertheless, I can keep my erotic longings to myself, and if it makes a fellow feel better to insist that his are bigger and more unruly than mine, he can insist away. What is far more disturbing, and what I cannot accept without mounting my soapbox for a lusty rant, is the tendency of the evo-psycho crowd to attribute to men not only greater sexual ardor, but greater ardor for life. Kass writes that men are not only innate sexual "predators," but are also "naturally more restless and ambitious than women; lacking women's powerful and immediate link to life's generative answer to mortality, men flee from the fear of death into heroic deed, great quests, or sheer distraction after distraction."

Others are even more presumptuous. On a computer list populated by academic sex researchers, one member recently asked for commentary about the following quote from an unnamed source:

As a consequence of differential evolutionary histories, human genetic males, on average, differ from genetic females in fundamental behavioral ways. Males are more competitive, aggressive, creative, and inquisitive than females. These behavioral characteristics are evident throughout human societies to one degree or the other, and in aggregate are irrefutable. These average differences are clearly reflected in the dominance and achievements of males over the course of human history in politics, architecture, science, technology, philosophy, and literature, among other areas of human activity and intellectual concentration. It is reasonable to posit that these average differences between human males and females are functions of the differential environmental demands human males encountered over tens of thousands of years in human evolution. Today these differences are founded in the genetic and hormonal constitution of the human male.

My reaction on reading this was, Huh? Are you joking? Men by their "genetic and hormonal constitution," are more "creative" and "inquisitive" than women? Sez who? Sez what data? To my dismay, other members of the list were unperturbed. "It is pretty standard evolutionary psychology of sex differences," shrugged one professor, referring to various popular books about evolutionary psychology, including the bluntly titled, Why Men Rule: A Theory of Male Dominance. Woe to this professor's female students if he conveys to them his settled opinion that males have a hardwired advantage in exactly those traits necessary to excel in his class. Well, every trait except cleavage.

I don't mean to be flip and sarcastic. OK, I do. But I also want to express my frustration at how readily and arrogantly so much evolutionary blather can be bandied about, with hardly a whimper of complaint or an attempt at alternative interpretation. Remember, I'm a big fan of Darwinism, convinced that by considering the deep roots of our past we can enrich our lives now, if only because understanding always trumps ignorance and denial. I also believe that evolutionary biology is a growth industry, and that we will be seeing ever more effort, inside and outside of academia, to examine contemporary human behavior from a Darwinian perspective. Fine. But maybe we shouldn't leave the analysis to a small, self-referential cabal of evolutionary psychologists, who attempt to reify the status quo with a few sweeping, simplistic, binary formulations.

Maybe we should seek to use Darwinian principles to our own nefarious ends -- beginning with a fresh understanding of feminist impulses. Many mainstream neo-Darwinists try to dismiss feminism: "We're scientists! We seek the truth about human nature, however unpleasant," they self-righteously maintain. "We must resist the forces of 'political correctness' and get at the truth."

But what this smug dismissal fails to address is the fact that feminism and its attendant egalitarian impulses are very much part of human nature. Hence, any system that purports to explain the primal origins of our desires must also explain why any of us want to be feminists in the first place. I would argue that feminism is an evolved trait -- part of the puzzle to be solved, not a distraction from it. If it takes evolutionary biologists who double as feminists to tackle this particular puzzle piece, they can fairly be said to be at their most "scientific" just when evo-psycho critics are pooh-poohing them for being driven by "political" motives.

Some scientists do see the need to move beyond clichés toward a more nuanced picture of human motivation, a recognition of the suppleness of human nature, the capacity for men and women to adjust their social and reproductive strategies as conditions around them change. Male as well as female scientists lately have argued for broadening the field of evolutionary psychology to incorporate the notion that our psychology does in fact evolve, is designed to evolve, even in the absence of genetic evolution. There is a reason why we have managed, for better or worse, to colonize virtually every habitat on the earth's surface, and to turn the planet and its glorious diversity into a vast playground for Homo sapiens. It's because we are omnivores in every sense of the word -- nutritionally, culturally, behaviorally. Any theoretical framework that slights our plasticity, that declares all or most men to be like this, and all or most women to be like that, is a framework fit only for kindling.

Here's an example of rigid absolutism, again from Sexnet, which made me run for my matchbook. A hard-core evolutionary psychologist presented his little gedanken, then kindly told us just how to gedank about it: "There is a contest," he wrote. "If you win you get either of two prizes: unlimited store credit at Saks Fifth Avenue for a 10-day period -- that is, you can have anything you can walk away with -- or have 10 extremely attractive total strangers of the preferred sex, a different one each night, come to your room, rip your clothes off, and have mad sex with you. I guarantee you that close to 100 percent of young men will choose the latter, and close to 100 percent (or literally 100 percent) of women, young or older, will choose the former."

The old Sex vs. Saks dilemma. When I read this, I thought, "Neither of the above, sir." I won't go into what my fantasy prize might be -- or might have been in the days when I was a single woman without kids -- but these boxes don't hold me and never did. Nor do they hold a lot of people, including a lot of good evolutionary scientists. I expressed my annoyance to David Sloan Wilson of the State University of New York at Binghamton, a scientist I mostly adore (with the exception of his occasional fits of didacticism that seem endemic to the scientific trade). Wilson has criticized much of the current evo-psycho literature while still considering himself an evolutionary psychologist, so I knew he'd sympathize with my desire for a more inclusive, expansive approach to understanding the evolution of human nature. I sent him the gedanken, and described my surly feelings about it. Darwin bless him for his delicious reply: "Your 'Neither of the above' answer can be given a serious scientific formulation. The evolutionary psychology view assumes that all resources for women flow through men, leaving only the 'strategies' of 'find the best husband' or 'maximize your returns from sexual favors.' The option that is not listed is 'self-determination,' or calling one's own shots. With this simple addition, feminism finds an evolutionary voice capable of silencing the evolutionary psychology voice on its own turf." Wilson then paused for a pious commercial break, warning me that whenever I sought to argue against "the narrow evolutionary psychology view, or any other objectionable evolutionary theory of human behavior," I must do so from an evolutionary perspective of my own, lest I "leave the opposition holding the banner of Darwinism," crowing about the stupidity of their critics for rejecting evolution altogether. "As an aside," Wilson went on, "even in its shriveled form the Sex vs. Saks experiment wouldn't work. Any guy with a brain (an oxymoron in most cases) would choose the Saks option and amass so much stuff over 10 days that he could have more than 10 women long enough to actually impregnate them. If he could choose Abercrombie & Fitch instead of Saks, he'd probably throw it all away for a single fishing pole. The boneheads who chose the women would probably have second thoughts by night 5 and would beg numbers 8, 9, and 10 to watch TV instead of having sex." In the words of George Bernard Shaw, Wilson concluded, "'They are barbarians who mistake their own customs for human nature.'"

What can we do to reclaim the blessed turf of Darwinism? How can we think afresh about our contemporary selves in the light of several million years of thrashing around in the grim and shank of nature? Let me toss out a few ideas I feel have been neglected in most pop renditions of neo-evo. Let me try, to the best of my ability as a serious if not officially credentialed Darwin hobbyist, to present an ancestral Eve who had greater or at least more complex aims in life than a Stone Age shopping spree.

I'll start with the answer I give whenever anybody asks me what I think the real, primal, non-negotiable differences between men and women may be. I preface my response by claiming the ignorance we all suffer under in any discussion of the roots of something as intangible and free of fossil evidence as human nature. But there is one big difference -- which amounts to an amusing similarity, with profound consequences. A woman, like any female primate, has two core desires. First, access to resources, which means food, shelter, and -- ever since we were so rudely and coldly depilated -- clothing, for herself and her young. Second, control over her sex life and her reproduction. What are a man's core desires? He, too, wants access to resources and control over the means of reproduction, which, in the absence of male parthenogenesis, means control over women. There's nothing inherently wrong with this desire. But the fact that women and men are tussling over the same piece of valuable real estate -- the female body -- means that the tedious, endlessly vivisected "war between the sexes" is pretty much built into the system. I'm by no means arguing that men and women can never get along. The best of friends and allies are often cunning competitors. Consider the Greek warriors in the Iliad who, during intermissions in the Trojan War, could think of no zestier way to spend their leisure than holding mini-Olympics to see who could run the fastest, throw the farthest, jump the highest -- all in the nude, no less. Recall as well that even the most seemingly like-minded, bodily bonded of dyads, mother and infant, engage in subtle conflicts. The fetus wants to grow very big very fast, while the mother wants to keep its dimensions compact and manageable to preserve her body for future trials, which is why some fetus-specific genes are designed to enhance the growth of the placenta, and the maternal equivalents of those genes help suppress placental ambitions. The child wants to stay on the breast year after year, the better to forestall births of rival siblings through the ovulatory suppression that nursing imparts; the mother wants to wean her greedy suckler and maybe have a few more kids without depleting her calcium stores and risking every osteocyte in her body.

Yet such subconscious clashes of interest do not mean that mother and young are "really" enemies rather than the great lovers they often appear to be. Instead, they are living creatures, bound together by fourteen-carat compromise, trading up Paradise Lost for Paradox Found, and relishing the match. So, too, can men and women love each other wildly without necessarily, or even desirably, seeing eye to eye -- provided everyone's eyes are wide and gimlet.

What the inherent dialectic of the sexes does mean is that men and women may have differing definitions of freedom. Evo psychos, opining from their standard masculinist perspective, emphasize the clash between a man's "restlessness" and a woman's desire for "commitment," as exemplified by the Leon Kass passage quoted above -- the assumption being that men need freedom and women do not. But if you take a more female-primate point of view, you see that quite often it is the woman who wants her freedom, and the man, or men collectively, who are determined to circumscribe her. A woman may want freedom to walk by herself down the street, just as a female chimpanzee may have the urge to move from denuded bush A to bursting berry patch B; but if the wayfarer happens to be a young urban Homo sapien, she will be harassed en route more mercilessly than any free-ranging ape. A woman may also want the opportunity to exercise that old gift of Mother Nature known as female choice -- to socialize, flirt, and, if the chemistry fits, to mate with the men she likes while avoiding those she does not.

But think of how many women are abused and beaten, sometimes hunted down and killed, by men who have either fallen off the women's A list, often because they were too aggressively possessive, or never made it to the chosen column in the first place.3 Many men play within the bounds of female choice and seek to please the women they find pleasing, just as women usually strive to please the men by whom they themselves hope to be chosen. But sometimes a man has little patience for the strictures of female choice; he wants access to the means of personal perpetuity that only a female body can give him, so whack smack get over here bitch! Who, in these cases, is seeking to "domesticate" whom, and who most fearful of being barred from connubial bliss?

Evo psychos are well aware of the potential ferocity of male sexual jealousy; they incorporate the power of that jealousy into many of their theories about differing male and female strategies. But they fail to admit that male jealousy exists because women are, whether they take the tag or spurn it, born feminists. Women, like men, want the freedom to roam, explore, experiment -- all desires to be expected in a highly intelligent, inquisitive, shrewd, opportunistic, social species. It's not "out of sync" with our "nature" to want autonomy. The individual is the reproductive unit. Through the fantastic efforts of eons of evolution, the individual is born to like its particular genome, to want to get as much of that genome into the population as possible. The individual does not like being pushed around, deprived of choice, enslaved. The individual tends to chafe against excessive oppression. This is not "political correctness." This is common sense, Darwinian sense; our past, present, and future sense.

Then there is the bracing sense of dollars and cents. Not only do women yearn for the plain old primate liberty to come and go, pick and choose. Protestations of Kass and company notwithstanding, women are also born ambitious: they want social power, respect, admiration. Such desires are not the invention of the modern feminist movement. They are our birthright, or burden, as a profoundly social species, in which personal power translates into all the goodies of life. Nor is the lust for acclaim and high rank in contradistinction to a woman's more familiar "nurturing" side. The two impulses -- to succeed in society, and to care for your children -- are expressions of the same drive. A good mother is a powerful mother. A good mother can accrue resources for her young, and a really good mother can outcompete other mothers in the neighborhood, thereby ensuring that her children will do really well, while the children of less ambitious stock skulk around the back forest smoking acanthus leaves before getting picked off by a leopard.

The inherent ambitiousness of women can be seen in any country where women are not confined to home or burqa. At the slightest opportunity, women flock to schools, so much so that university officials in the United States bemoan the comparative lack of male faces in the classroom. Women take to the professions with astonishing ease: ever since the contemporary feminist movement helped open heretofore forbidden trades to women, the number of female doctors and lawyers has jumped from a few percent to nearly 50 percent, and woman-owned businesses are the fastest growing sector of our society.4 Despite media gloatographies about the women who yearn to stay at home and be supported by a man, surveys repeatedly show that most employed women like earning a paycheck.

Yet despite the evidence, evo-bloviators have ignored or denied the existence of women's ambition. Behind this neglect are a couple of conceptual chestnuts in serious need of roasting.

First is the idea that males and females have wildly different reproductive prospects. By this notion, males tend to fall on either end of the reproductive scale, as "zeroes" or "heroes," with most failing utterly to reproduce, and a minority of lucky stiffs monopolizing most of the females and siring most of the young. In contrast, females have been viewed as interchangeable, bearing more or less the same number of offspring and being more or less similarly talented in mothering skills. Hence, males had a strong spur to be hyperambitious and competitive, while females supposedly did best by keeping a low profile, busying themselves with a predictable number of bairns.

Recent research, including extensive paternity studies using DNA fingerprinting techniques, has skewered this folklore. As it turns out, the alpha males in many species breed fewer young than presumed, and the supposed duds sometimes prove spermic studs. Among females, on the other hand, the discrepancy in fruitfulness is far greater than previously believed. Some females are much better at bearing and rearing young than others, and those supermoms, as it happens, are the powerhouses of their societies. For example, Flo, a member of the Gombe chimpanzee troop long studied by Jane Goodall, was the most prolific female chimp of all time. She reared all but one of her nine infants to adulthood, a success rate at least twice that for the average chimpanzee mother. Flo also happened to be the most powerful female chimpanzee any researcher has ever observed. She could displace virtually any other chimpanzee -- save the highest ranking, much larger males -- from a prize feeding site, and her subordinates competed for the chance to groom her. So powerful was Flo that her daughters managed to stay in their birthplace rather than being forced to migrate at puberty as female chimps usually are; those daughters in turn became powerful, prolific matriarchs.

"Mother chimps like Flo were not simply doting nurturers but entrepreneurial dynasts as well," writes the primatologist Sarah Blaffer Hrdy in her marvelous book, Mother Nature: Maternal Instincts and How They Shape the Human Species (Pantheon, 1999). "A female's quest for status -- her ambition, if you will -- has become inseparable from her ability to keep her offspring and grand-offspring alive." As Hrdy sees it, a generalized striving for local clout was programmed into the primate female's psyche long ago, the result of a convergence between high status and successful motherhood.

Another reason why the evo psychos have shortchanged female striving stems from their assumption that whatever status and power women have sought they sought secondhand, by coupling with strong, ambitious, powerful men. This supposition is part of the larger tenet that women have a much greater need for men than any other female primate has for her male counterpart. The prolonged helplessness of the human infant (the story goes) means that a woman can't rear it alone; hence the evolution of love, romance, and committed fathers. It's true that women need help to rear their young, much more help than any other female ape requires. But the most recent anthropological evidence strongly suggests that women get such help from many quarters: from men, from relatives, from their older children. In some traditional cultures, senior females are indispensable to the welfare of their young kin; in others, women rely more on the assistance of brothers, uncles, and male cousins than on the take-home prey of their mates; elsewhere, women accept contributions from a number of different consorts. As anthropologist Meredith F. Small notes in Kids: How Biology and Culture Shape the Way We Raise Our Children (Doubleday, 2001), about 90 percent of childcare in the world is performed by older siblings.

In sum, women through the ages and across the world's stages have been remarkably creative and adaptable when seeking solutions to the childcare crisis. We have always lived in a nanny state of one sort or another. For their part, men do not always display the hallmarks of devoted fatherhood. As Geoffrey F. Miller has described in The Mating Mind: How Sexual Choice Shaped the Evolution of Human Nature (Doubleday, 2000), much of the behavior we view as paternal may be a courtship display, a way of pleasing one's current mate and perhaps attracting the attention of other females in the vicinity. If good fathering conduct were driven by the same thing as is maternal behavior -- a desire to improve one's offspring's chances of survival -- why, Miller asks, would so many fathers end up as deadbeat dads who invest virtually nothing in the children of women they have divorced or abandoned? After all, DNA paternity testing is a ridiculously recent invention, and the grim male fears synopsized by the couplet, "Mother's baby/Father's maybe" are not to be dismissed out of hand.

If paternity uncertainty bred waffling fathers prone to bolting from their responsibilities, we would expect as a corollary women who likewise waffled about pinning their future and their children's welfare to one man, however alpha. How foolish a woman would be to forsake any attempt at gaining a degree of personal power or cultivating a reliable route to resources, simply for the opportunity to marry an ambitious man who could easily abandon her, be killed while out hunting, or simply prove to be a fraud. It's tempting to think that women have indeed "evolved" to hook their prospects to their mates, because we see as much in the annals of history -- not to mention the pages of Jane Austen -- but in fact the condition of extreme female dependency on husbands is very recent, and depends for its maintenance on a strong set of laws making divorce difficult and punishing deadbeatism. As we've seen in recent decades of loosened divorce laws, women who cling to the model of complete economic reliance on a husband suffer terrible financial hardship when the marriage breaks up, and they and their children are all too likely to be cast into poverty. That such a risky "my man is my meal ticket" strategy could have arisen and persisted in prehistory, in the absence of a legal system and in the face of chronic threats of famine, seems to me frankly laughable. Better to be ambitious, cunning, and, yes, creative, competitive, and aggressive. Better to earn your degree, learn a trade, get a paycheck, kiss it, and sock it away. If you're going to bank on anything, it might as well be a bank.

Natalie Angier is a best-selling author and Pulitzer Prizewinning science writer for The New York Times. Previously, she has been senior science writer for Time magazine, an editor at the women's business magazine, Savvy, and a professor at New York University's Graduate Program in Science and Environmental Reporting. Her first book, Natural Obsessions (Houghton Mifflin), an inside look at the world of cancer research, was named a notable book of the year by The New York Times and the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). In 1990, she began working for The New York Times; the following year, she won a Pulitzer in the category of beat reporting, for a series of articles on a wide array of scientific topics, from the biology of scorpions, to the astonishing prevalence of infidelity in the animal kingdom. Among her other awards are the AAAS-Westinghouse award for excellence in science journalism, and the Lewis Thomas Award for distinguished writing in the life sciences. Her second book, The Beauty of the Beastly (Houghton Mifflin), has been translated into eight languages. Her latest, Woman: An Intimate Geography (Houghton Mifflin, 1999; Anchor Vintage paperback, 2000), was a bestseller, a National Book Award finalist, winner of a Maggie Award from the Planned Parenthood Federation, and named one of the best books of the year by the Los Angeles Times, the Chicago Tribune, and other major media. She is the editor of The Best American Science and Nature Writing 2002 (Houghton Mifflin). Her writing has appeared in numerous periodicals ranging from the Atlantic Monthly to Natural History, from Cosmopolitan to Ms.

Suggested Further Reading

Ehrlich, Paul R. Human Natures: Genes, Cultures, and Human Prospects. Washington, D.C.: Island Press, 2000.

Hrdy, Sarah Blaffer. The Woman That Never Evolved. Boston: Harvard University Press, 1981; reissued with a new Preface in 1999.

Jolly, Alison. Lucy's Legacy: Sex and Intelligence in Human Evolution. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1999.

Rose, Hilary, and Steven Rose, eds. Alas, Poor Darwin: Arguments Against Evolutionary Psychology. New York: Random House, 2000.

Small, Meredith F. What's Love Got to Do with It? The Evolution of Human Mating. New York: Anchor Books, 1995.

Copyright © 2003 by Robin Morgan

Most helpful customer reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
I didn't know I have such a huge family with ...
By Mary Anne Burke
I didn't know I have such a huge family with so many extraordinary sisters. Of course all women are exceptional. Robin opened up my world to learn
about how much women have accomplished. My former life was starved for knowledge about the suffering and the courage of women everywhere.
After reading this book my heart goes out to women of all ethnicities and races. My upper middle class views have been enriched exceedenly. I hope to read more books by Robin. I need her knowledge sooner than later. Thank you Robin.

22 of 24 people found the following review helpful.
Like a soft rain on parched earth
By Anatidae Ling
This is your Feminist Consciousness: (Imagine a geranium, wilted and bedraggled, in a cracked flowerpot.)
This is your Feminist Consciousness after reading SISTERHOOD IS FOREVER: (Imagine the same geranium, but now it is vibrant with new blooms. Its wide, striped leaves obscure the rim of its painted pottery planter. Bees and butterflies alight on its red floral globes.)
Well, that's how it was for mine. Morgan's first two Sisterhood anthologies introduced me to Feminism and shaped the way I understand economics, relationships, spirituality -- (pretty much everything!) But I read them years ago when I was in college. Although I proudly identify myself as a Feminist, I haven't felt very politically active in the past decade. SISTERHOOD IS FOREVER reminded me of the many shapes political action can take. It introduced women who are making a positive difference in women's lives -- and in the whole wide world -- in a breathtaking diversity of ways. Writers, musicians, doctors, mothers, representatives in Congress, organizers and others tell how they work, what they do, how much they have accomplished, and what they hope to achieve.
SISTERHOOD IS FOREVER really does represent a wide varity of points of view. Young and old women, women of many different ethnic groups, women with disabilities, poverty activists, professional women, and more have space on these pages.
Read it and realize that you are part of a proud and powerful global sisterhood of Feminists.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Excellent Overview
By review
This book is a ver good start for those interesed in feminism. Morgan collects 60 essays for well-known feminist authors. The topics ranges from reproductive, health, and environmental issues to workplace inequality. The book is so cheap in comparison to the material. I will buy Morgan other books. I think they are an investment in comparison to price.

See all 5 customer reviews...

Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press PDF
Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press EPub
Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press Doc
Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press iBooks
Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press rtf
Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press Mobipocket
Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press Kindle

^^ Ebook Free Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press Doc

^^ Ebook Free Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press Doc

^^ Ebook Free Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press Doc
^^ Ebook Free Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New MillenniumFrom Brand: Washington Square Press Doc