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The"other side" of ourselves
I am cured

Deeply moving photos and text, tell a sad story.I was touched to my soul, by the photos, and how well they conveyed a race of people who have all but vanished.
The text that goes with the pictures is also quite good, and tells a remarkable story of a man obsessed to tell the world a story which we all need to hear and see. Curtis sacrificed his own finances and marriage, and did succeed in completing a very exhausting pilgrimage.
This book is artistic and historically accurate

humility, humility, humilityHe submitted to his father's desire that he not become a monastic for a long time. Even against his own desires, he submitted to his earthly father.
For a long time after he became a monk, his own brother was his Elder (Elder Moses of Optina)...and imagine submitting yourself to your brother, even if in a monastic setting (a most difficult task indeed.)
Not only that, but he endured untold physical suffering. He had many and various ailments that he patiently endured as part of God's will.
He also took the burden of becoming an abbot, something most monastics do not want to do, since it requires so much time handling earthly matters.
All of these things he endured patiently without grumbling to others or about others. While many would call this weak willed, Elder Anthony showed strength and discernment in realizing that all these things helped him along the path of salvation.
An inspiring story of a simple man that loved God with every ounce of his being.
In addition to a biography of his life, the book also includes several letters he wrote and some of his teachings.
A fantastic book of a true disciple of Christ.
Optina Tradition for Today

eNTER THE EMERGENCY EXIT
Excellent!I must confess that I am not fond of reading plays. While a work of prose allows your mind to spontaneously create its own images, a play does not. One must first create a mental image of a stage, then create the appropriate scenery, props, and the like. Then one must scrupulously follow what character is speaking, mentally attribute the corresponding voice and follow each character's entrances and exits so as not to have the wrong character on the stage at any given time. There is the whole business of delivery . . . how a written line is to be spoken; what emotion, how intense and so on.
Emergency Exit eliminates most of these problems. First, there are only two characters, Angelo and Martino. The setting is the interior of an abandoned dwelling in Naples. Santanelli is highly directive, providing copious directions for the characters - something that actors and directors may find confining, but removes much of the guess work for the reader. So, from the reader's stand point, it is direct, to the point and unambiguous.
But the real value is its content. Emergency Exit is a metaphor for life. Two characters, one of high birth and the other a commoner, represent the Everyman in each of us. They find themselves sharing quarters in a district of Naples which is largely deserted due to earthquake damage. The threat of another quake looms ever in the background. Angelo's and Martino's arguments and bickering vacillates from the trivial to the profound, but always has the texture of reality. Effusive with existential despair, it never wallows - you are constantly motivated to turn the next page.


The Ultimate Vaudeville Resource!
What a beautiful thing to do - Thank you, Mr. Slide!

Literature doesn't get better than thisThe story is based in the abandoned villa on a hilltop in central Italy. It is 1944 and the Allies are advancing yet the scent of victory is overwhelmed by accumulated shell shock. The central characters in the villa: Hungarian Count Lazlo de Almasy, Canadian nurse Hana, the Indian sapper Kip and the thief Caravaggio are all burned out by war and in de Almasy's case, literally and mortally burned. Hana is nursing her mysterious dying patient who gradually details his life as an explorer in the desert of northern Africa and reveals his doomed, magnificant, obsessive, life-altering love affair with Katherine Clifton, an English rose with the tenaciousness of a lioness. Hana, who has lost everyone she dared to love, tries to insulate herself from the world but in the presence of Kip and the less noble Caravaggio, she reaches out once again. This is a story of love's expectations, and the shifting loyalties of friends, family and nations in times of war, of deadly betrayals and being rescued by strangers, of healing wounds and preparing for death. In short, all the stuff top class literature is made of and, strangely, pretty much what happens around us every day although the settings might not be as exotic.
Minghella has constructed a vast canvas of human experience, yet he does not waste a word. He peels away the exterior visage of his characters to reveal their joy and pain with an exquisitely bare, poetic use of language. The consequences of their lives remained with me long after I had put the book down. I pick up The English Patient from time to time and the magic is always there.
Brilliantly moving and dynamic

Excellent and Refreshing BookAll who are concerned about this subject and read this book will find much to ponder. Few books really shed new light on one's thinking, but this is one of those books.
insightful and well-researched

This book is awesome!
Another grouping of Anthony's best

First Rate, Fantastic, BUY THIS BOOK!
I most highly recommend this book!

An off the beaten path success!
Wonderful Novel