Dear Barb 2: Advice for Daily Life


Book Description

Dear Barb 2: Advice for Daily Life is an insightful down-to-earth book, which offers tips for manoeuvring life's difficult journey. We all have obstacles in our everyday lives that we only talk about with our best friends and family members. Dear Barb 2: Advice for Daily Life is an anthology of many of these hurdles. Barbara Godin has been answering your questions for over 20 years, and often the solution may be as simple as a shift in perspective.




Aunt Barbara's Powerful Little Book of Comfort


Book Description

This is a lovely gift for someone who is going through one of life's many challenges. All of us have the right and potential to be happy. This book reminds us in concrete ways to locate the center of happiness that is always within no matter what the situation.You have the power to change everything. Right now. It is the opportunity of this sudden loss in your life that challenges you. Ask for what you need. Ask in prayer. Ask in wishes. Ask and you shall receive. Be patient. Answers will come as you continue to focus on positive thoughts, "I will be all right" and "Things will be fine, I just know it!" Stay active. Dare to follow your dreams. Write in your journal about your dreams for creating a brighter future. Replace every thought of fear with a thought of confidence that your needs are always met and always will be met. Stay away from what has no value (negative thoughts) and continually visualize your well-being. It is time to start now.




Forthcoming Books


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Aunt Barb's Bread Book


Book Description

Bake up your great grandmother's wholesome, tasty hearth-baked breads in your own kitchen today! Be amazed by the stunning loaves you'll pluck from new or vintage cast iron pans, baking stones, or everyday kitchenware as you recreate yesterday's wood-fired oven for your modern range or fireplace. Recipes from 1820 through 1920 include harvest apple bread, whole-grain little gem breads, oat sandwich loaf, buttermilk rolls and lots more. Aunt Barb's Bread Book contains oodles of period photos and bread-lore, and is appropriate for all skill levels.




Books in Print


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Living with a Wild God


Book Description

From the New York Times bestselling author of Nickel and Dimed comes a brave, frank, and exquisitely written memoir that will change the way you see the world. Barbara Ehrenreich is one of the most important thinkers of our time. Educated as a scientist, she is an author, journalist, activist, and advocate for social justice. In Living With a Wild God, she recounts her quest-beginning in childhood-to find ""the Truth"" about the universe and everything else: What's really going on? Why are we here? In middle age, she rediscovered the journal she had kept during her tumultuous adolescence, which records an event so strange, so cataclysmic, that she had never, in all the intervening years, written or spoken about it to anyone. It was the kind of event that people call a ""mystical experience""-and, to a steadfast atheist and rationalist, nothing less than shattering. In Living With a Wild God, Ehrenreich reconstructs her childhood mission, bringing an older woman's wry and erudite perspective to a young girl's impassioned obsession with the questions that, at one point or another, torment us all. The result is both deeply personal and cosmically sweeping-a searing memoir and a profound reflection on science, religion, and the human condition. With her signature combination of intellectual rigor and uninhibited imagination, Ehrenreich offers a true literary achievement-a work that has the power not only to entertain but amaze.




Wish


Book Description

From award-winning author Barbara O'Connor comes a middle-grade novel about a girl who, with the help of the dog of her dreams, discovers the true meaning of family.




Performing Tsarist Russia in New York


Book Description

An examination of the popular music culture of the post-Bolshevik Russian emigration and the impact made by this group on American culture and politics. Performing Tsarist Russia in New York begins with a rich account of the musical evenings that took place in the Russian émigré enclave of Harlem in the 1920s and weaves through the world of Manhattan’s Russian restaurants, Tin Pan Alley industry, Broadway productions, 1939 World’s Fair, Soviet music distributors, postwar Russian parish musical life, and Cold War radio programming to close with today’s Russian ball scene, exploring how the idea of Russia Abroad has taken shape through various spheres of music production in New York over the course of a century. Engaging in an analysis of musical styles, performance practice, sheet music cover art, the discourses surrounding this music, and the sonic, somatic, and social realms of dance, author Natalie K. Zelensky demonstrates the central role played by music in shaping and maintaining the Russian émigré diaspora over multiple generations as well as the fundamental paradox underlying this process: that music’s sustaining power in this case rests on its proclivity to foster collective narratives of an idealized prerevolutionary Russia while often evolving stylistically to remain relevant to its makers, listeners, and dancers. By combining archival research with fieldwork and interviews with Russian émigrés of various generations and emigration waves, Zelensky presents a close historical and ethnographic examination of music’s potential as an aesthetic, discursive, and social space through which diasporans can engage with an idea of a mythologized homeland, and, in turn, the vital role played by music in the organization, development, and reception of Russia Abroad.







The Impact of Victorian Children's Fiction


Book Description

Originally published in 1981. Many of the classics of children’s literature were produced in the Victorian period. But Alice in Wonderland and The King of the Golden River were not the books offered to the majority of children of the time. When writing for children began to be taken seriously, it was not as an art, but as an instrument of moral suasion, practical instruction, Christian propaganda or social control. This book describes and evaluates this body of literature. It places the books in the economic and social contexts of their writing and publication, and considers many of the most prolific writers in detail. It deals with the stories intended to teach the newly-literate poor their social and religious lessons: sensational romances, tales of adventure and military glory, through which the boys were taught the value of self-help and inspired with the ideals of empire; and domestic novels, intended to offer girls a model for the expression of heroism and aspiration within the restricted Victorian woman’s world.