Book Description
"A mother through the eyes of a baby: a mother's a mirror, a doctor, a story, the top of a mountain, a mother's a home"--Back cover.
Author : Aurore Petit
Publisher :
Page : 48 pages
File Size : 26,68 MB
Release : 2021-03
Category : Juvenile Fiction
ISBN : 9781776573233
"A mother through the eyes of a baby: a mother's a mirror, a doctor, a story, the top of a mountain, a mother's a home"--Back cover.
Author : Francesca Momplaisir
Publisher : Vintage
Page : 305 pages
File Size : 40,96 MB
Release : 2020-05-12
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 0525657169
One of the Best Books of the Year: Elle, Harper’s Bazaar, Vulture • This uncompromising look at the immigrant experience, and the depravity of one man, is an electrifying page-turner rooted in a magical reality • “Impossible to stop reading” —Vulture When Lucien flees Haiti with his wife, Marie-Ange, and their three children to New York City’s South Ozone Park, he does so hoping for reinvention, wealth, and comfort. He buys a run-down house in a quickly changing community, and begins life anew. Lucien and Marie-Ange call their home La Kay—“my mother’s house”—and it becomes a place where their fellow immigrants can find peace, a good meal, and necessary legal help. But as a severely emotionally damaged man emigrating from a country whose evils he knows to one whose evils he doesn’t, Lucien soon falls into his worst habits and impulses, with La Kay as the backdrop for his lasciviousness. What he can’t begin to fathom is that the house is watching, passing judgment, and deciding to put an end to all the sins it has been made to hold. But only after it has set itself aflame will frightened whispers reveal Lucien’s ultimate evil.
Author : Patricia Polacco
Publisher : Penguin
Page : 49 pages
File Size : 49,68 MB
Release : 2009-04-30
Category : Juvenile Fiction
ISBN : 039925076X
A heartwarming story of family, love, and celebrating what makes us special, from master storyteller Patricia Polacco, author of Thank You, Mr. Falker. Marmee, Meema, and the kids are just like any other family on the block. In their cozy home, they cook dinner together, they laugh together, they dance and play together. But one family doesn't accept them. Maybe because they think they are different: How can a family have two moms and no dad? But Marmee and Meema's house is full of love. And they teach their children that different doesn't mean wrong. No matter how many moms or dads they have, they are everything a family is meant to be. Celebrated author-illustrator Patricia Polacco inspires young readers with this message of a wonderful family living by its own rules, held together by a very special love.
Author : Beth Dunlop
Publisher : Princeton Architectural Press
Page : 200 pages
File Size : 27,9 MB
Release : 1999
Category : Architecture
ISBN : 9781568981734
Twenty-five houses designed by currently practicing architects.
Author : B. S. Johnson
Publisher : New Directions Publishing
Page : 212 pages
File Size : 39,82 MB
Release : 1986
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 9780811209816
"Shares the thoughts and memories of eight elderly men and women living in a nursing home." -- Amazon.com viewed November 25, 2020.
Author : Cynthia R. Chapman
Publisher : Yale University Press
Page : 355 pages
File Size : 43,5 MB
Release : 2016-10-25
Category : Religion
ISBN : 030022480X
A novel approach to Israelite kinship, arguing that maternal kinship bonds played key social, economic, and political roles for a son who aspired to inherit his father’s household Upending traditional scholarship on patrilineal genealogy, Cynthia Chapman draws on twenty years of research to uncover an underappreciated yet socially significant kinship unit in the Bible: “the house of the mother.” In households where a man had two or more wives, siblings born to the same mother worked to promote and protect one another’s interests. Revealing the hierarchies of the maternal houses and political divisions within the national house of Israel, this book provides us with a nuanced understanding of domestic and political life in ancient Israel.
Author : C. B. Christiansen
Publisher : Puffin
Page : 36 pages
File Size : 20,57 MB
Release : 1990
Category : Juvenile Fiction
ISBN :
CHILDREN'S BOOKS/AGES 4-8
Author : David Armand
Publisher : Texas A&M University Press
Page : 183 pages
File Size : 20,76 MB
Release : 2016-03-11
Category : Family & Relationships
ISBN : 1680030736
Set in the bucolic, yet brutal South of his youth, My Mother’s House is a memoir by novelist David Armand. It recounts the young author’s early memories of being born to a schizophrenic mother, then given up for adoption, only to be raised in a home with an alcoholic and abusive step-father. In this sharply-remembered portrait of the people and places that shaped him, Armand paints his seemingly negative experiences with a sympathetic and understanding brush. As the reader follows Armand through his childhood and later into adult life—when he is reunited with his mother after she makes a failed suicide attempt—a surprisingly new world of hope and possibility is rendered, despite the overwhelming challenges of this reunion. [Armand's] writing is reminiscent of Hemingway: straightforward descriptions of manly action punctuated by laconic dialogue."--New York Journal of Books "Armand writes in a comfortingly familiar literary voice that blends Ernest Hemingway’s laconic but rhythmically complicated explorations of the mysteries of masculinity with William Faulkner’s more fabulist, Southern Gothic twang. It’s a heady, seductively intoxicating combination."--Richmond Times-Dispatch
Author : Holly Pierlot
Publisher : Sophia Institute Press
Page : 221 pages
File Size : 36,83 MB
Release : 2004
Category : Religion
ISBN : 1928832415
With the help of your own rule, you can get control of your household, grow closer to God, come to love your husband more, and raise up good Christian children.
Author : Wendy Ho
Publisher : Rowman & Littlefield
Page : 294 pages
File Size : 20,51 MB
Release : 1999
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780742503373
Unwilling to see Asian American women silenced beneath the noisy discourses of feminists, cultural nationalists, and Eurocentric historians, Wendy Ho turns to specific spoken stories of mothers and daughters. Against reductive tendencies of scholarship, she places her own conversations with her China-born grandmother and her U.S.-born mother and her own readings of other Asian American women writers. She finds in the writings of Maxine Hong Kingston, Amy Tan, and Fae Myenne Ng not only complex mother-daughter relationships but many-faceted relationships to fathers, family, community, and culture. Always resisting the simplistic explanations, In Her Mother's House brings Asian American women's experience as mothers and daughters to the forefront of gender and ethnicity.