Tadville


Book Description

Tadville by Joaquin Bowman Tadville is the story of growing up with undiagnosed mental illness, written from the perspective and experiences of a younger brother. The story, which spans a fifty-year period, begins in Hollywood, California, in the 1940s, where an aspiring actress forsakes her dream of glamour and remains home with her two boys in a destructive marriage. Infidelity and sometimes violent arguments become routine in the family life the author characterizes as the freak show. Tad, the older boy and subject of the story, enjoys the complete devotion of his mother, who labors to conceal his unusual characteristics, primarily associated with Asperger’s syndrome. When the Bowmans relocate to Pennsylvania, family life eventually dissolves into relationships where love and companionship are used as bargaining chips. Not until the author spends time with a warm and loving aunt and her large family does he realize how broken his family truly is. “Aunt Eleanor, my mother’s sister, was short, motherly, and kind. I envied my cousins, and as a seven-year-old kid, I wondered why our family couldn’t be more like theirs.” The sometimes sad and funny story moves quickly through the years until Tad, as an adult, refuses to relinquish the “game” he imagines himself winning, then finally admits defeat shortly before his death in 1994. Family members look back and remember the fatally flawed person they loved and, at times, feared. The story reveals the conspiracy of silence surrounding his illness and unusual behavior, a mistake that will affect future generations. Tadville, a brother’s story, profiles a world of fantasy, domination, power, and jealousy and will provide compelling reading. Hopefully, telling the story will prove beneficial to families who are struggling with mental health issues along with disorders on the autism spectrum, including Asperger’s.







The Bilioustine


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Report


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Climatological Data


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The Mugging of Kiel Opera House


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Ed Golterman was a writer-producer of marketing and training programs, and book shows for business theater. Mr. Golterman spent ten years in radio and TV news and sports. He is a concert and show baritone and a life-long student of musical theater. His father, Edward N. Golterman, was an assistant to four St. Louis mayors (Darst, Tucker, Poelker, and Cervantes). His mother, Maria Marceno Golterman, was an operatic soprano. Eds grandfather, Guy Golterman, produced grand opera and classical performances at the Coliseum, The Muny, and Kiel Opera House and Convention Hall. Golterman also inaugurated Cleveland Stadium with a grand opera in 1931. July Fourth, 1998, Ed wrote an impassioned defense of Kiel Opera House and sent it to the Urban Land Institute in Washington D.C. A ULI panel would soon come to St. Louis to advise on what to do with the Opera House. (Apparently re-opening the great theater to help bring back a downtown seemed too simple). Kiel Opera House was going down to protect the Fox Theater on Grand Avenue and Kiel Center from what they feared as night time competition. Serving narrow self-interests hampers downtown revitalization. Citizens of the region, taxpayers and visitors deserve a better St. Louis, a better downtown. That means Kiel Opera House. A newspaper columnist wrote of Ed: He has been calling on the wrong people for two years. Yes, and they are all the wrong people. Ed Golterman believed nothing written, said, or promised about Kiel Opera House. That has given him an edge on the battlefield. As Ed learned about Kiel Opera House studies in the spring of 1998, it became clear her enemies were about to finish her off. He said: No, and went to battle. Ten years later he is still fighting




Climatological Data for the United States by Sections


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Collection of the monthly climatological reports of the United States by state or region, with monthly and annual national summaries.




Biennial Report...


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