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Letter Writing Tips for Spanish Writers
Great Reference Guide
A Spanish-language guide to the art of writing letters.

Disturbing and frightening
Puzzeling, troubleing and captivatingIt is not that anything horrible or sickening does happen. This is not a "horror" book in this sense - the horror is more inside your brain and your uncomfortable feelings. You feel uncomfortable because something wrong is happening and you do not always know how to point it out.
Do you know the feeling you get when you are having a conversation with someone and only after you end the talk you say to yourself that he said or hinted things you should not have tolerated and that you should have reacted differently... or maybe that the message delivered was not what you initially had in mind and then you are very upset at yourself for not crying out and saying this or that...? Well this is my attempt to describe some of the emotions this book has evoked in me.
However, having said this, I think that the uncomfortable feeling is exactly what the writer has tried and succeeded in creating and thus the reading is worthwhile. It is like being in another mind which is both similar and different from your own. So many things are familiar and so many thoughts are thoughts you have thought before; and yet, so many actions and reflections are so totally unusual....so defying .
Natalie, the main character is not someone I like (why? because I cannot understand her; because she upsets me. I kept thinking "Can't you see this is dangerous; why aren't you more careful of the other girls... " ). However, she seems so troubled you do not want anything bad to happen to her. You also share Natalie's confusion - the theme of "did THIS happen or not" and "am I really here" is very strong throughout the book and the reader is a true participant in this sense. You are not sure if the things described did happen or not? If the characters did exist (the girl Tony - is she real or is she an imaginative friend? A close soul mate everyone wishes for, someone who can read your brain, even the hideous things in your mind ) and what are their motives? You can only guess. And maybe nothing really happened? The terror is really subdued and is sometimes conveyed in seemingly innocent (women) conversations. These polite dialogues can be very cruel and someone is sure to be stabbed in the back.
I despised Natalie's father. This person sees everything as a life experience you must endure in order to grow up and be a "better person/writer/critic" and thus although he can see Natalie has problems in college his only words are that this is a good experience for her. He has no empathy. He is a person which is so self centered he has no time for sympathy / real emotions or real communication. I think that he sees Natalie as his creation and this self centered feeling he confuses with love. I see the father as the true villain of this book and I blame him for most of the bad things Natalie has to endure.
Natalie is alone in the world (at least this is how she feels).
I am tempted to write "aren't we all... " - we all spend our lives in trying not to be and this is why Hangsaman is such a troubling story.
Bottom line of this depressing review is that I do reccomend the book. Its a book that stays with you.
A haunting yet confusing novel that I could not put downI imagine that loners like myself will strongly sympathize with Natalie and her struggles. I was amazed to see her expressing thoughts I myself have at times: Am I really here? Am I really alive or just dreaming that I am alive? Are the people around me real or are they just "actors" in the performance that is my life? Are they all conspiring against me and plotting my downfall? If I think of something today that I have not thought of in a long time, will I not encounter (and thus have created by my thoughts) that thing tomorrow? Natalie clearly deteriorates mentally as the story progresses, but I (like her) am left with questions about the events described--What was real and what was not real? What really happened with the man in the woods? Was Tony real? To what does the title Hangsaman really refer? There are many questions I am left to ponder after finishing this book. I can't say that the ending was bad; my expectations were proven wrong, which is always a good thing about a book's conclusion. If the whole story had been explained in detail, I realize that its effects on me would have been minimal, whereas my questions will keep the story in my mind for some time to come and will probably compel me to re-read the novel at some point in the future. Shirley Jackson tells a gripping story and makes Natalie a character I strongly liked, sympathized with, cheered for, and worried about. The writing is really quite magical and unlike anything else I have read from other writers. As weird as the story and characters sometimes are, you still feel a close, emotional connection with both. The writing is so powerful that it is quite capable of bringing on anxiety attacks of a sort for this reader. Jackson's writing is equivalent to a roadside accident--although you may see something unpleasant, you have to look, and then it is all but impossible to ever look away. In its own way, Hangsaman is as good a read as The Haunting of Hill House and We Have Always Lived in the Castle.


Help From Above
Wonderful book
MyShelf.com Book ReviewerAfter the tragic death of his parents George Billington escapes his grief through drugs and alcohol. Knowing his addiction will eventually lead to his destruction, an angel suddenly appears hoping to be in time to save his soul.
Ronald is the angel assigned to help George beat his harmful addictions. With his holy guidance, he hopes he is not too late to assist him in conquering his addictions and moving forward with his life.
Upon meeting George, he quickly realizes his case is far more serious than he alone can handle. He makes the decision to enlist the help of George's sister, Karen Billington and a trusted priest, Father Timothy Gill. Together will the three be able to unite and save George from his wicked wayward ways? Or will it mean the ultimate downfall of them also?
HELP FROM ABOVE is powerfully written. This gripping emotional story presents a realistic glimpse into the sufferings of drug and alcohol abuse. Readers will walk away feeling as though they witnessed a miracle as the ending dramatically closes.


A Hero In Every Heart-Great Book!
A great inspirational book for athletes and non-athletes.
Excellent for building character. Mottos for life.

SAAAWWWWEEEEEEETTTTTTTT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
A New Concept in Hoof Care
Important news for horseowners

A truley revultionary collection of love and support!
Hemingway and Thoreau - LOOK OUT!!!
The most wonderful collection of poetry I've ever seen.As you can see by this most heart felt quote from the poem "The World", Ms. Perryman has a true gift for words and expression. I believe this collection to be a true work of genious. I purchased several copies myself and have passed them out to friends as gifts. It is my favorite party past time. When I'm feeling disenchanted with the world, I simply pick up this amazing text, and I am once again set free through the beauty of her words. We should all be thankful that the world has Telia Perryman in it (forget about Michael Jackson - Telia RULES!)


3 generations of the Andersons agreed this is GREAT!After Dad read it I loaned it to my older son, then aged 12. He had the same addiction as Dad and I.
The three of us are not prone to dwell on science, history, or anything of great consequence often, but we still frequently discuss topics first brought to our attention by probably the greatest, and certainly one of the most prolific and diverse writers in history.
I challenge any reader to not contemplate many of the thoughts expressed by Asimov in this fascinating and intriguing book.
Asimov and Hawking were probably the two most intelligent science writers of the 20th Century. Asimov alone, however, also was a skilled writer of history and fiction.
Required reading.
Brilliant

"Dawn of the Living Dead"1. What makes Dubliners so amenable to an annotated edition is that it is essentially an immediately accessible work of fiction - Joyce's only one, (the Portrait's a little trickier).
The multiple place and character references make up a significant portion of the narratives - lose these settings, and you're not left with the virtuoso, stand-alone subtle psychological complexities of either the Portrait or Ulysses to gnaw on.
2. Is it "Margaret Mary Allicott"? I forget the spelling. Apologies. A reference is made to her in Dubliners... Buck Mulligan refers to her in Ulysses as "Margaret Mary ANYcock".
Without annotations, what can you make of that? Who was she?
The annotated Dubliners points out that MMA was a figure of considerable religious veneration in Dublin at the time. Icons of her were to be found in many homes. She would drink only dirty washwater, and ate only the pus from her numerous sores:
Neglecting the body = Sanctity = turn of the century Dublin morality [! ]
The annotations permit you to enjoy not only the bizarre character of the Zeitgeist, but also appreciate the Buck's nasty pun.
3. My point here is that you can only appreciate these sorts of references WITH annotations. And you can easily imagine that the instances are numerous.
The pictures & annotations are not "a key"; rather they breathe life into a good collection of early Joycean tales.
4. A fun copy. And remember, these stories were originally read by people who DID understand the references and allusions.
The only readable version of Dubliners and heartily commended to all wishing to enjoy and appreciate these heartwarming yarns of a city's moral and psychological twilight: paralysis, disillusionment, and collapse.
Survey sez: "Marvellous".
A great book and wonderful treasure
in stores and worth perusingThe drawings, photographs, and newspaper clippings provide a first hand sense of what Joyce's Dublin was like then. Like a mail order fountain pen, whose newspaper advertisement from Christmas 1903 is reproduced in the book. Maybe Gabriel Conroy bought one. I've never used a fountain pen - to me the advertisement is a subtle reminder of how distant Joyce's Dublin is from us now.
Warning - It's tempting to spend more time reading the notes and annotations than reading Joyce himself.


The cover alone should be enough to interest you
I Recommend this book.
Excellent Reference Guide.
The book's compact size and price are extra reasons to purchase it. I also recommend "Cassell's Colloquial Spanish: A Handbook of Idiomatic Usage" if you want to improve your grammatical knowledge of Spanish. "Cassell's Colloquial Spanish" is the best book on Spanish grammar, vocabulary, and sentence structure on the market, and addition with the "Guide to Correspondence in Spanish," I can guarantee that you will be writing like a professional is a matter of time.