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Favorite-est Story!
Favorite-est Story"I was the happiest dad who ever turned, to a book from which to read he'd learned. My children are enjoying too, a beloved tale that when young I knew. My mother sat me on her knee so the Diggingest Dog I could see. And now I share the same with three."
Favorite-est Story

GOOD, BUT NOT ACCURATE
Dear America Mirror, Mirror on the wallThese Girls (all except for Ellin because she is not blind)came from all across America to go to the Perkins School for the Blind. The school is in Boston Massachusetts. The school teaches the girls how to read brail, get along with people, and how to take care of themselves. This book is a true story about Bess, Amanda, and Eva trying to get through life being blind.
I would recommend this book to people who like to read about true stories about people.
A great bookBut Elin isn't always there. Their parents decide to send Bess to Perkin's school for the blind, where Bess can learn to do things for herself. So Bess and Elin agree to write in her diary when she comes home on weekends.
This book is absolutely wonderful. Barry Denenburg is a really great writer.
One of the parts I liked is where all the students at Perkin's were going to do a play that came right from Barry Denenburg's other book, When Will this Dreadful War be Over. And Bess got the part of Rachel, the slightly cuckoo cousin! What a laugh.


A Graduate Student's ReflectionEdited by John M. Perkins
Legendary urban minister and founder of the Christian Community Development Association, Dr. John Perkins, has edited a wonderfully helpful "how-to" manual for urban ministry practitioners who are interested in serious Christian community development. As a graduate student of religion, I had the opportunity to study urban ministry this semester and found Perkins' collection of essays to be most instructive. In his own words, Perkins assembles this collection of essays as "a handbook that describes not only the theology, principles, and strategy that guide what we are doing, but also offers more practical how to's-lessons learned from years of struggle and triumph in some of America's toughest neighborhoods," (Perkins: 13). As a serious scholar of Christian community development, that is, grassroots efforts through the Christian church to provide "creative long-term solutions to the problems of the poor," Perkins shares invaluable principles that will undoubtedly benefit persons whom God calls to lives of ministry in the city. With a central emphasis on the three R's-redistribution, reconciliation, and relocation, Perkins and his colleagues provide a blueprint for holistic Christian community development.
In three sections, Perkins and his colleagues outline the following: Foundations of Christian Community Development, Strategy of Christian Community Development, and Ministry in the Community. The essay topics range from Understanding Poverty in part one to Indigenous Leadership Development in part three.
Why read this book? Anyone who wishes to minister in the inner city should read this book simply because one can draw valuable insights from individuals who have already committed their lives to urban ministry and missions and are doing it well. Who should read this book? Anyone who is considering ministry in the inner city, regardless of her background, should read this book. It is an especially helpful beginner's guide. It will long be considered a part of the canon of urban ministry literature. The reader will find it to be very practical, well written, and useful. It engages the student in a serious and stimulating conversation about how God is already working in the city.
On a scale of one to ten, I give this book a seven. As I have already mentioned, its quality is good, and it will be extremely helpful to a person considering urban ministry. Moreover, it has contributed to the scholarship of this field in ways that are immeasurable.
A Missiological MustThe book is written from a vast spectrum of perspectives. The content spans from theological reasoning and standpoint, to the simple, yet profound reminder for ministers to serve their husbands/wives and children. As supporters of the Christian Community Development Association, these writers hold no qualms about articulating the need to edify and create similar programs in the nation's communities. Whereas several other urban missiologists write from an international vantage, Perkins primarily keeps his message within American walls. Nevertheless, the information provided is pertinent to any urban context across the globe. The commonalities of poverty, leadership development, and the local church are addressed - making this text one of value for most ministers of the city.
While projecting a foundational theology that seeks to meet spiritual needs, Perkins proposes a strategy for missionaries and teams that include the book's major themes of relocation, reconciliation, and redistribution. In the midst of defining and promoting Christian community, the necessity of indigenous leadership and partnering with the local church, Perkins maintains a tone of '3R' tactic. Due to a lack of Christian disciples in the city, the book heavily pushes for avoidance of urban flight, while advocating relocation to the heart of town. In addition, the editor believes that a failure to redistribute resources, time, and the Gospel back into the lives of the ghettos and slums will yield a continued hopelessness in the hearts of the city's residents. And at the crux of the matter, the reader is encouraged to ruminate upon the significance of reconciliation (God-to-person and person-to-person) for reaching the goal of meeting needs and building the Lord's church in the city.
Perkins' concern is the establishment of Christian presence in the hurting communities of America. He and his co-writers are well aware of the social gospel, but their motivation is for the spreading of the Good News to transform the spirit of the urban world - above and beyond providing for temporal needs. For the novice, the book serves to expose and inform. For the expert, it works to challenge and sharpen.
Great Beginnings

Good book for company leaders
A delight to read!
The Holy Grail of Collaboration Revealed

excellent stories with a thesisGilman's stories are most often didactic, that is, they have a clear message. She is a first rate story teller. These are fascinating tales about real human beings, like a well-traveled great aunt might have told about traveling across the plains in a covered wagon.
Town gossips sit around sharing scandal with the new lady school teacher in "The Unnatural Mother." The reader is in on the irony almost immediately, that the mother in question is a heroine, a woman well ahead of her time in her child-raising practices and her willingness to sacrifice for the public good. To the locals she's plain unnatural.
These stories are great fun... quirky, ironic, satirical. They were way ahead of their time politically and socially, promoting family relationships, childcare, and responsibility in a non-preachy and dramatic (and often funny) manner. Perhaps that's why they don't feel dated. Gilman might be happy with the way things have gone in the 20th century; her stories still speak to the modern reader.
An excellent selection of feminist short stories.
writing in a gilded cage

Another Valuable Resource for Animal CareersWhat you will find is a book that contains information on volunteering opportunities, career realities, some of the animal training schools, and a good compilation of facilities that you might find interesting.
If you have dreamed of an animal career with marine mammals then invest in this book!
So Complete and Comprehensive.. It's Spectacular!
Very info. for any one wanting to become a profressional

A classic and organised textbook which need more updateING
A useful review of basic pathology
Explicative, Complete and Easy to Understand

BoringIf you want to read a good book on amazon shamans (Shuars and others) and Ayahuasca (vine of the spirits) then rather try 'Cosmic Serpent : DNA and the Origins of Knowledge' by Jeremy Narby.
THE "INSIDER" VIEW OF A REMARKABLE AMAZONIAN TRIBEBill Pfeiffer
Spirit of the Shuar: An Incredible Read!The Shuar are proud people who are perhaps the only tribe remaining in all of the Americas who have never surrendered to any would-be conquerors. Until recently, the Shuar lived in a shroud of secrecy, fiercely protecting their lands and privacy. Twenty years ago it would have been unimaginable that Shuar warriors, women, elders, and uwishin ("the ones who know") would willingly and openly share their traditions, mysteries, and life stories with outsiders. But these are new and challenging times for the Shuar. They are struggling to retain their traditions as well as their right to survive in the face of the insatiable hunger of oil companies and lumber conglomerates for their lands. And missionaries who seek to save their souls and rescue them from ways deemed uncivilized. Too many outsiders have in recent years come to them with the intent to teach and reform, but not to learn. And, as you will learn from reading Spirit of the Shuar, the Shuar have much wisdom to convey.
In this spirit Mariano Chumpi, a Shuar warrior and co-author of Spirit of the Shuar, agreed to record on cassette tape the stories and wisdom, the feelings and impressions, of his people. The resulting transcripts were put in book form by Mariano's long-time friend, John Perkins. This collaboration resulted in a masterpiece! Spirit of the Shuar combines the colorful spoken language of a peoples reliant upon oral tradition with the skilled written craftsmanship of author John Perkins who first became acquainted with the Shuar as a Peace Corps volunteer over 30 years ago. It is a sensitive and revealing portrayal of the traditions, way of life, and spiritual practices of a people who proudly stand against the pressures of modernism.
The tales contained within Spirit of the Shuar are told in a direct and elegantly simple style. The pages come alive as the reader is given a glimpse into what it might feel like to live among the Shuar. Warriors share their experiences of participating in head-hunting wars. Shamans speak of all-night healing ceremonies during which both the uwishin and his patient typically consume a powerful medicine plant, ayahuasca. Later, the uwishin blows tsentsak, invisible darts, into the heart of his patient to aid him in seeing where the problem originates and how it must be healed. Women discuss how they prepare chicha, a fermented manioc beverage which serves as a primary food for the Shuar, which men are only permitted to touch with their lips. Intimacies about family living, courtship and sexual practices are openly discussed; such details are a natural part of living to the Shuar and there is no hint of embarrassment or withholding. Rosa Shakai, Mariano's mother, even explains how Shuar women "rein in their men" when they cut down too many trees or hunt more than need dictates.
Spirit of the Shuar also contains 12 pages of color photos of the peoples and places you read about. You will see people like Tukupi, the most famous of living Shuar warriors, who as a young man defeated and killed thirty-three enemies - mostly Achuar - in hand-to-hand combat. But now, as an elder, he is regarded as a great healer for Shuar and Achuar alike. You will see the Shuar dressed in their traditional clothes and in their missionary-approved attire. The intimacy of the words and pictures will make you will feel as if you have been invited into a Shuar home to share in a cup of chicha and animated conversation. I found delight as I was permitted a rare glimpse into the thinking and lifestyle of people who continue to live in much the same manner as did their ancestors hundreds, perhaps thousands, of years before. I think you will too.
But Spirit of the Shuar is so much more than a well-told rendition and exposé of a culture and peoples different from our own. It is an appeal by the Shuar for our help...not in monetary terms, but in attitude. These proud, formerly secluded people opened their hearts and lives because it is their belief that when their ways are understood, and their humanity is accepted as equal yet different from our own, that their traditions and right-to-exist unmolested will be acknowledged and supported. For make no mistake about it...the jungles are shrinking and indigenous peoples such as the Shuar are fast disappearing from the face of the planet. If these peoples are to survive, if the very lands upon which they live are to remain pristine and a haven for a multitude of species (many of which are not even yet known to scientists), as a culture we must "change our dream".
Those individuals who contributed their thoughts and intimacies in the Spirit of the Shuar are explicit in their hope that those of us from industrialized nations who participate in the dominion and exploitation of nature and resources will come to replace this value by more earth-friendly dreams. The Shuar - who have never known defeat and who live in harmony with the dangers inherent in jungle life - do not give up, they adapt. Proud warriors who in earlier times would have fought to the death to repel an outsider are now revealing their secrets, willingly and freely. In reading their words you will fall in love with the beauty of the jungle and perhaps come to feel, as I do, that the peoples and the land in which they live hold a beauty that is worthy of our respect and protection.


Difficult to Follow
Use it every day.
A Comprehensive Leadership resource

A GREAT SENSE OF IMAGINATION
Imaginative tale of a descent into madnessThe narrator of the story is, from a modern point of view, a normal, young, married woman who also has a desire to write. However, bound by Victorian mores and restrictions, this desire to write is deemed inappropriate at best and casts questions about her not fulfilling her (only) role as wife (and mother). She was only to focus her attention on "domestic" concerns (house, husband, children) and anything remotely intellectual was considered a threat to her sanity and her physical health. When she refuses to bow to society's (and her husband's) ideas of womanhood, she is confined to a room for COMPLETE rest (meaning NO mental stimulation of any kind, no reading, no writing). What makes matters worse is that her husband (a doctor) is also her jailer, and instead of truly understanding his wife as a human being, opts to follow society's standards instead of doing what is in the best interest of his wife (and her health, both physical and mental). Not surprisingly, she rebels a bit, and continues to write her thoughts in a journal, hiding the journal and pencil from her husband. When her deception is discovered, she is even more strictly confined than before, and denied contact with her children.
It is at this point that she begins her descent into madness--not from the desire to write and express her creativity, but from being denied an outlet for that creativity. She was not mad before she was prescribed complete rest, but rather the complete rest which caused her madness. She begins to imagine things (shapes, objects, animals, people) in the yellow wallpaper which covers the walls of the room to which she is confined. As more restrictions and controls are placed upon her, her imagination grows, until finally she strips the wallpaper to reach the figures, and is found by her husband, surely and completely mad.
I liked this story very much because the author conveyed the kind of dead lives many talented, creative women must have been forced to lead due to society's ideas of women and their abilities while fully backed by the medical profession. She clearly illustrates that in this instance, doctors and husbands do not know best, and that their very best intentions had the precise effect of bringing about the madness that they sought to cure. As I read the story, I wondered why her husband (and the doctor) were so blind as to the causes of her "nervous condition". It obviously was not working, and rather than demonstrating their intelligence by trying something else or, God forbid, asking her what she needed (a couple hours per day to devote to writing, a small thing indeed), continued along the same methods of treatment, only with more restrictions! The social commentary and the commentary on the status of women in society and in their own families is handled in an effective way by the author, not only in her prose but in the development of the characters and the storyline. It is a most persuasive plea of the basic idea of feminism--that women are people too, with talents and abilities outside of their roles as wives and mothers that deserve an opportunity to be developed. In reading this story, I am amazed by how far we as a society have come in changing our views of women, and yet by how much further we have to go. I highly recommend this book.
This book was also made into a show that aired on PBS' Masterpiece Theatre in the late 1980s. I have not been able to find a copy of the program, but remember that it was well-produced and faithful to the story.
Early Feminist Insight