Breastless in the City


Book Description

I was only 25 years old when I became a widow, Cathy Bueti writes in this gripping memoir of courage and survival. He was my high school sweetheart and, like Romeo and Juliet, we fell in love when we were only 15 years old. But her husband's shocking death in a car crash is only the beginning of Cathy Bueti's story. Six years later, at age 31, emotionally recovered, with a career and a new life, she was suddenly diagnosed with breast cancer. This is Cathy Bueti's astonishing, very human story - ultimately a journal of a unique woman who survives every challenge life can place before her.




Women's Health


Book Description

If you're careening through midlife in crisis mode, this book will help you feel more confident about the changes that are occurring. Women's Health: Your Body, Your Hormones, Your Choices is a compassionate, practical guide that gently reminds women that midlife is not only a time of change but also a time of great freedom. Full of insightful information, this Cleveland Clinic Guide provides peace of mind and helps women regain control of their personal health during midlife. Here's the truth about hormone therapy as well as other safe and effective methods for finding wellness. You'll learn about: How to stop hot flashes and get a good night's sleep, The facts about vitamins, supplements, and antidepressants, Using diet and exercise to boost energy, The basics of good bone health, Preventing cancer and heart disease, How to recharge your sex life. Book jacket.




Pictured in My Mind


Book Description

A stunning book featuring full-color reproductions of art by American self-taught artists







Cities in Ruins


Book Description

Purdue Studies in Romance Literatures publishes studies on topics of literary, theoretical, or philological importance that make a significant contribution to scholarship in French. Italian. Luso Brazilian, Spanish, and Spanish American literatures. --Book Jacket.




The Publishers Weekly


Book Description







The Female Voice in The Assembly of Ladies


Book Description

The Assembly of Ladies is a fifteenth-century secular love poem in Middle English that adheres closely to conventional poetic structures, but throws these conventions into relief as it presents the narrative from a woman’s point of view, a rare occurrence for poetry of this period. Who wrote it, for whom and why, are questions about which we can speculate, but never ultimately answer–the poem itself gives us few clues. Yet the poem has had a remarkable shelf-life; in subsequent centuries the poem has continued to be noticed, read, and debated, as a small but significant artefact from fifteenth-century England. This book examines how fifteenth-century English social conventions impact upon gender relations in The Assembly of Ladies. By drawing on contemporary (and clearly influential) texts from the fifteenth century as a comparison, Marshall shows how The Assembly of Ladies has integrated social conventions into its themes and structure, elevating for the reader the ways that social and literary conventions impact on women in the production and consumption of literature.




The Girl Who Dared to Defy


Book Description

In the wake of the violent labor disputes in Colorado’s two-year Coalfield War, a young woman and single mother resolved in 1916 to change the status quo for “girls,” as well-to-do women in Denver referred to their hired help. Her name was Jane Street, and this compelling biography is the first to chronicle her defiant efforts—and devastating misfortunes—as a leader of the so-called housemaid rebellion. A native of Indiana, Jane Street (1887–1966) began her activist endeavors as an organizer for the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW). In riveting detail, author Jane Little Botkin recounts Street’s attempts to orchestrate a domestic mutiny against Denver’s elitist Capitol Hill women, including wives of the state’s national guard officers and Colorado Fuel and Iron operators. It did not take long for the housemaid rebellion to make local and national news. Despite the IWW’s initial support of the housemaids’ fight for fairness and better pay, Street soon found herself engaged in a gender war, the target of sexism within the very organization she worked so hard to support. The abuses she suffered ranged from sabotage and betrayal to arrests and abandonment. After the United States entered World War I and the first Red Scare arose, Street’s battle to balance motherhood and labor organizing began to take its toll. Legal troubles, broken relationships, and poverty threatened her very existence. In previous western labor and women’s studies accounts, Jane Street has figured only marginally, credited in passing as the founder of a housemaids’ union. To unearth the rich detail of her story, Botkin has combed through case histories, family archives, and—perhaps most significant—Street’s own writings, which express her greatest joys, her deepest sorrows, and her unfortunate dealings with systematic injustice. Setting Jane’s story within the wider context of early-twentieth-century class struggles and the women’s suffrage movement, The Girl Who Dared to Defy paints a fascinating—and ultimately heartbreaking—portrait of one woman’s courageous fight for equality.




Breastless


Book Description

Stacy Nottle thought she had her act together, until she ran face first into a cancer diagnosis and her carefully constructed sense of identity shattered.