Pepito's Cuba & the Avocado Baseballs


Book Description

The idea of Pepito’s story came from the living conditions in Cuba over the last fifty plus years; chiefly, the absence of nourishing food, manufactured conveniences of every imaginable type, and the lack of common over-the-counter drugs as well as late generation medicines. The foregoing issues principally related to Fidel Castro’s attack on American-style civil liberties and the right of self-determination. The focus of the book however, is the part true but mostly fictional tale of a young boy born to an aristocratic birthright, his few early years of earthly bliss, and his emotional detachment from the nation’s poverty-politics through his obsession with the game of baseball and the baseball games he plays with significant difficulties. The backdrop, and no-less-moving than Pepito’s story, is the living kaleidoscope of characters around Pepito and their own very personal challenges living in the `so called’ communist state. If you appreciate reality and truth in fiction, this is one story you may truly like.




Resonances of El Chavo del Ocho in Latin American Childhood, Schooling, and Societies


Book Description

El Chavo del Ocho is one of the most influential pieces of popular culture to have hit Latin America in the last 50 years, having, at the peak of its popularity in the mid-1970s, reached an approximate audience of 350 million across the Americas. It is also a rare example of a cultural product that has travelled through Latin America, leaving a lasting impact for several decades. Resonances of El Chavo del Ocho in Latin American Childhood, Schooling, and Societies analyses the phenomenon of El Chavo, and its images of schooling and childhood, Latin American-ness, class and experience. With contributions from scholars emerging from or based in countries including Brazil, Mexico, Chile, Puerto Rico, Argentina, Venezuela, Colombia and the US, the book combines reflections from a variety of international perspectives without attempting to compare or reach consensus on any ultimate meaning(s) of the work. The book explores themes such as images of schooling and childhood, romantization of poverty, the prevalence of non-traditional families and the bordering cynicism towards the economic structures and inequalities which, some argue, make the show transgressive and quite uniquely Latin American. Investigating the connection between visual culture studies and transcultural curriculum studies, this innovative title provides scholars with original new insights into conceptualizing childhood, schooling and society in Latin America.




Pepito's Cuba & the Avocado Baseballs


Book Description

A passion for life, freedom, & baseball. Pepito's Cuba & the Avocado Baseballs personifies the absence of the free enterprise way of life and the problems suffered living under the shroud of strict government rule and a fixed economy. Featuring nostalgic, fictionalized games with Yankee greats, such as Mickey Mantle, Yogi Berra, Elston Howard, Whitey Ford and others, the story teaches young and old alike the value of free enterprise in a very remarkable way. It is a fascinating, creative tale highlighted by Pepito, a small boy whose only goal is to play baseball amidst his family's misery living on a communist Caribbean island. A fascinating, creative story featuring Pepito, a small boy whose only goal is to play baseball, amidst his family's misery and hardships due to living on a communist Caribbean island without the luxury of a free economy.




Pepito's Cuba & the Avocado Baseballs


Book Description

Pepito's Cuba & the Avocado Baseballs is based on the historical circumstances of an aristocratic Caribbean family and their two boys before the successes of Fidel Castro's revolution and after the wholesale communist transformation's eventualities post the American embargo that results in an unrecognizable, poverty stricken island world of food shortages, forced relocations, and the mere luxuries of children's toys are forces of family reckonings.




Spain, Third Edition


Book Description

A readable and erudite study of the cultural history of Spain and its people.




The Poetry Teatime Companion


Book Description

A collection of public domain poems and images to celebrate the practice of poetry teatime with children.




Shakespeare Stories


Book Description

By skillfully weaving his own prose with Shakespeare's language, Leon Garfield has refashioned twelve of the Elizabethan playwright's most memorable dramas into stories, capturing all the richness of the characters, plot, mood, and setting. This format will delight both those who know the great dramatist's works and those who are new to them. Michael Foreman's dramatic color illustrations and varied black-and-white line drawings are the perfect complement to this celebration of Shakespeare's genius.




Coastal Plant Communities of Latin America


Book Description

Vegetation ecology of rocky shores, Macroalgae of the Cabo Frio upwelling region, Brazil: ordination of communities, Mangrove macroalgal communities of Latin America: The state of art and perspectives, Effect of human exploitation on the intertidal community structure at the Valdivian Coast, Chile, Lessonia trabeculata, a subtidal bottom kelp in Northern Chile: a case study for a structural and Geographical comparison, Algal communities of a wave-protected intertidal rocky shore in Southern Chile, The seagrass ecosystem and Resources in Latin America.




Sonia Flew


Book Description

THE STORY: When Sonia learns of her son's decision to leave college, enlist in the military and fight against terror in Afghanistan in the weeks following 9/11, memories of her own childhood overwhelm her. She struggles to reconcile being forced as




Louisiana Trail Riders


Book Description

African American Trail Riding Clubs have their roots in the Creole culture formed in South Louisiana in the eighteenth century. Today trail rides are an opportunity for generations of people to gather, celebrate, and ride horseback. The riders form a distinctive yet little-known sub-culture in Southwest Louisiana. In addition to sharing an important aspect of Louisiana's cultural heritage, Ariaz's photographs assert a counter-narrative to historic representations of the cowboy and prevailing images of difference and despair in Black America.