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Wonders of The Wallpaper
Post Partum Madness?The first time I ever encountered this story was at a dramatic interpretation contest in high school-- and when the girl performing this did her descent into madness, it made the hair crawl on the back of my neck. If you really think about what's going on, you too will be creeped out.


Sometimes you got to be funny*This is a witty,humorous novel that is a pleasure from start to finish.
This book was excellent!

A deep look into myself
Write your Dream Person into LifeRecently the Wall Street Journal ran an article on September 17, 2002 showing how nearly 34 million people surf the web to view personal ads.
Many people are caught up in a busy lifestyle and don't always have as much time to attend a wide variety of social activities. Writing personal ads has become the most expedient and preferred way to meet people. These days anyone from 18-90 can find a partner through personal ads.
I can't tell you how many people have written me telling me they are still looking for their "dream person" and now I have a book to recommend to them. Either they are looking for people in all the wrong places or they have stopped trying because finding that one person they want to be with seems almost impossible.
Charlotte Digregorio approaches this subject with humor and creativity. First she explains how you can use this book to your advantage and then gives specific details to help you compose that "perfect personal ad."
You will find hundreds of tips, useful phrases and descriptive words. There are also examples of ads you would never want to write and some pretty hilarious examples. I loved: "Prince in Hiding." If I was writing an ad, I'd have to say: "Looking for Prince who is secretly a French chef presently hiding out in secluded castle by the sea. Must enjoy reading me poetry in bed and love spending April in Paris."
How fun, you could "write your fantasy" into life. Of course, I'm joking around, but this
book could literally bring anyone from anywhere in the world into your life.
Contents:
General Tips on Personal Ads
Writing Gaffes
A Sampling of Inadequate Ads
Useful Phrases
A Sampling of Creative Ads
As far as safety goes, Charlotte gives some excellent reasons why you should meet people in a public place for "lunch or coffee" and always be honest and original, yet cautious. The author also shows how most people tend to leave out the most essential information. This is the main reason you might not be getting the desired responses from your ad.
Charlotte advises her readers to make each word count and to use a headline to set the ad apart as a unique and exciting choice. She advises some soul searching to determine who you really are, who you are looking for and the relationship you really want to seek.
"I like to have fun" is not sufficient. As she says: "Does fun mean you like to play basketball or swing from chandeliers?"
You might want to ask:
How do I spend my free time?
Is social or educational background important?
What type of personality do I seek?
Within this unique book you will also find a sampling of over 100 Ads that range from
ultra conservative to rather spicy.
It should be noted that Charlotte has written ads for friends and those ads have resulted in six marriages to date! She is also a professional writer and author of three books and over 700 articles. She is now a popular speaker, workshop leader and respected writer on single's issues.
The author found her "dream person" through a personal ad so is well qualified to give advice on this subject. After reading this book, you will soon see that she is the expert on this subject for sure!
This book is for anyone who:
Does not want to bar-hop.
Doesn't want to invest in a costly dating service.
Doesn't have time to attend a variety of activities to meet that dream person.
Hasn't had success with the personal ads they have written.
The perfect gift for your single friends who are dying to meet their ultimate fantasy. It is also just pure fun to read even if you are not single. Even more fun than reading the ads in the paper or online.
An amusing, helpful and delicious read.
~TheRebeccaReview.com


Finding her place in the worldBeetle is a smart, compassionate girl, but a timid one, too. She allows Jane Sharp to boss her around and the local boys to tease her mercilessly.
Karen Cushman chose the England of the Middle Ages as a setting for the book, and has researched the subject exhaustively. We learn about village life, medicine, feudal structure, and the place of women in that society. Most enjoyable to follow is Beetle's progress from a scared, meek little girl to a self-assured young woman who has chosen her own name: Alyce.
While not romanticizing Alyce's situation, Cushman makes it clear how much more is available to her than to upper class women of her time. At the end of the book, Alyce chooses her own future from several options. She selects the life that will allow her the most independence. With a name and a career of her own choosing, Alyce has come far indeed from the dung heap.
The Midwife's ApprenticeBeetle was living on the street the night she decided to use the dung heap for a bed. The heap provided warmth, and, in the morning, a day's work and some food from the local midwife, Jane Sharp. Soon, that one day turns into months, as Beetle becomes the midwife's apprentice. Eventually, she gets a new name, Alys, and a new status. But all is not well, for failure comes knocking at Alys's door, and instead of facing it, she decides to run away. She goes to an inn, and here, with the help of her cat and a scribe, she learns that she is smart, she is pretty, and that maybe failure her failure wasn't so bad after all.
Midwife's Apprentice

Better than the last edition, but still needs work.
great, but with deficiencies...the pros: the maps and city plans are substantially better than in the competitors' guidebooks (where footprint is severely lacking, for example)... lonely planet is one of the few cheap-o style travel guidebooks that gives you information on at least a few hotels that are not youth hostels, dives or other forms of bottom-barrel accommodation; in other words, they at least give you a few mid-range and expensive options if you wish to go that way... all the essentials are there, with great suggestions on places to sleep, eat and visit
the cons: as with ALL of the backpacker/youth travel guidebooks (LP, footprint, rough guide, let's go), the information on sights/monuments/museums, etc., is SEVERELY lacking... there is just the most basic of information on the history of the sights that you have gone so far to see... which makes it necessary to buy another book, pay an expensive guide or some such thing... (for instance, you will rarely read detailed descriptions of the artwork to be found in a church and are often left wandering about saying 'this is so beautiful, i wonder what it is...i wish the guidebook would tell me more!') i know this would make the guidebooks huge, but even 50% more information would be wonderful so as to have a little bit more of a grip on what you are looking at after taking a 12-hour bus ride through the andes to get there!
which is why, despite its quality, i always felt the need to take another guidebook along, just in case...using my usual technique of tearing out just the pages i would need from each book
The Best Guide for Peru

The most misunderstood book in the world.
I liked it more at 24, then when I was 15
JuxtaposeHolden is a unique character in himself. He observes other people's "phony" actions and ridicules them for it, when at the same time Holden is not perfect by any means. I think the idea of seeing your self, and self-actuality are two of the novel's main themes. Holden is one of the most prominent protagonists in contemporary literature because he is so easily realted to. His hardships of adolescense can apply to almost every teenage in today's world. The struggle for a purpose in life is one of the biggest challenges that people face, and I think the novel shows one way that a lot of people handle it.
This novel is one of the best books in American contemporary literature because it carries so many themes and ideas about life that everyone can relate to.


Not worth the troubleThis book has very little in the way of plot. I was re-reading Phantom of the Opera (leroux) at the time and couldn't even bare to touch Night Magic after I was through with it.
Erik is no where near the complicated and intelligent character we have come to know and love in both the musical and the novel, Marisa is a poor excuse for a Christine-wana be. It reads like a bad fanfic, Erik's disfigurement is no obstical were it should be, the only 'bump' in the road of this book really was the fact that Marisa wanted a child. If all you want is some sort of lesser Phantom gets the Girl, then this is it. If you haven't read PoTO then you might enjoy this. But for any true Phan it is deeply dissapointing and you sincerly wish that the one and only Erik would sweep in and kill them all by the end of it.
A good read, but not quite good enough.
"Night Magic" says it all.It was pure magic.
I am a huge Phantom of the Opera Phan and have read many of the various books out there on the subject as well as most of the only Phiction written by people like me, and I've even written a few myself. This book is high on my list of favorites.
Allen tells the story in a modern setting, which I had never seen before. This made the book entrancing for me. I could not put it down.
Many Phantom Phans don't like it because it is a modern story with modern themes, but I still see the beautiful story of The Phantom of the Opera under the modern glaze.
It is fascinating to read this book and draw comparissons to the origional story and novel. As you read you can picture the characters perfectly, even with the more modern appearances and descriptions. Allen transports the age-old story into a modern setting without disregarding any detail.
Pure Magic, a must read for any Phan


A Darkly Romantic NovelThe story contains a great deal of darkness and some cruelty, which may turn readers away. Love is often extreme to the point of violence in the novel while the romances themselves are nearly incestuous in tone. Cousins marry and adopted siblings hold lifelong affections and obsessions for each other. The novel also illustrates an element of cruelty that can be slightly disturbing at times. Heathcliff, the novel's antagonist, goes as far as to string up the beloved dog of the young woman he courts after Catherine rejects him.
The main focus of the story is the rather twisted love story element that develops between Catherine and Heathcliff. Heathcliff is adopted into Catherine's family at a young age and the pair become close, though Catherine rejects him because he is poor and instead marries a rich neighbor. Though throughout the novel, other romances develop between the two highly inbred families, they are side stories in comparison to the main romance.
The love of Catherine and Heathcliff eventually develops into an obsession that lasts, and in fact becomes even stronger with the eventual death of Catherine. Her spirit seems to haunt Heathcliff and further fire his obsession. Even before Catherine's death this obsessive love broadens to include an equally obsessive drive to ruin the lives of all the people who mistreated him and stood between him and Catherine, including her husband and older brother.
These obsessions eventually lead to the last of the major themes of the novel, revenge. A good part of the book is spent upon Heathcliff's attempts to destroy the lives of anyone and everyone who mistreated him or got in the way of his relationship with Catherine. His need for revenge does not lessen as the book moves on and Heathcliff continues to take his revenge even upon the next generation, including Catherine's daughter and his own son. Whether or not Heathcliff succeeds in his attempts I leave to the reader.
Personally, I enjoyed this book a great deal, if for no other reason than the simple fact that it was quite different from the usual school assigned reading. I was pleasantly surprised by how well woven and engaging the book was. The calculating lengths that Heathcliff goes to in order fulfill his quest for revenge are nearly reason enough to read the book. The old style language of the book, which I expected to be a hindrance, was hardly noticeable. In short, if you can handle (or enjoy) the book's darker aspects, then I highly recommend this classic to you. (And I'm not just saying that because I have to! ;))Enjoy!
The Most Beautiful Book
Not for the "immature" reader...

The ultimate cure for insomnia!I honestly try to appreciate what is *supposed* to be fine literature, but "Great Expectations" is about as entertaining as watching kale grow. First off, the fact that this book has two endings inspires a bit of skepticism in me. I've never heard of an author so indecisive that he would put two endings in a novel. It creates a generally unsatisfying conclusion, as you're at a loss for which ending to "accept".
Aside from which, this book has enough useless passages to fill a hundred pages or so. It seems that, basically, Dickens didn't quite know exactly what to write about, but felt the urge to *write* *something*. So he wrote "Great Expectations", following the traditional poor-boy formula of his previous 15 or so books.
I find it especially hilarious that none of my teachers have ever even read the bloody novel, but it's "good" according to the curriculum. In the words of someone from a certain other Charles Dickens book, "Bah! Humbug!".
Don't judge Dickens by this book, however. "David Copperfield", for example, even though it follows the same "poor-boy" formula, is worlds better than this.
As much as I'd love to say, "Oh, it's a classic, everyone should read it!", I personally don't think so.
a high school boy's review
A great read

Powerful play with a lot of meaning about human rights
A Portrait of Marriage in Ibsen's A Doll's HouseThe play raises questions about female self-sacrifice in a male-dominated world. Nora is a "wife and child" to Torvald Helmer, and nothing more. She is his doll, a plaything on display to the world, of little intellectual value and even less utility in his life. Thus it is logical for Helmer to act so shockingly upon his discovery that Nora has managed financial affairs (typically a family responsibility reserved for the patriarch) without so much as his consent or knowledge. What, then, is the play saying about women by allowing Nora to act alone and independently, all the while allowing her to achieve little success in doing so?
Such an apparent doubt by the playwright of the abilities of women is quickly redeemed by Nora's sudden mental fruition, as though she, in the course of a day or so, accomplishes the amount of growing up to which most persons devote years and years. She has developed the intuition and motivation to leave behind everything she has lived for during she and Helmer's eight years of marriage in exchange for an independent life and the much-sought virtue of independent thought. Nora suddenly wishes to be alone in the world, responsible for only her own well-being and success or failure. She is breaking free of her crutches (Helmer, her deceased father, the ill-obtained finances from Krogstad) and is now appetent to walk tall and proud.
Through the marital madness of Helmer and Nora, Ibsen is questioning the roles of both husband and wife, and what happens when one person dominates such a relationship in a manner that is demeaning to the other, regardless of whether such degradation is carried out in a conscious, intended frame of mind. Ibsen is truly a master playwright, and his play A Doll's House is truly a masterpiece.
This book was way before it's time - Ibsen was a genius!The author himself said that this play was about human rights, not women's rights. While I believe this to be true, I still have no problems understanding why the female rights groups says that "A dolls house" is about women's rights. Whilst this play was written over a hundred years ago, many of the issues about women discussed in "A dolls house" are still applicable today. I think Nora is a *great* role model for a woman of the new millennium!
If you, like me, had to read this as a part of your college literature requirements, give it another try! It is a wonderful book.
Gilman's use of an unlikable setting sets the stage for disaster, which is a great technique. Gilman has the woman set up in a romm that is absolutely dull and depressing. The woman is not satisfied with her room and wishes to be somewhere more pleasant to spend her time. "I don't like our room at all...The paint and paper look as if a boys school used it...it is dull enough to confuse the eye in following..." (Pg, 43) The room has bars on the windows, the wallpaper is torn, and the headbaord is chewed on. It is no place for a patient. I feel that anyone would just want to die.
In the beginning of the story, Gilman has the woman patient sounds sane as if she could be cured in no time at all. The husband does not listen to his wife and he states that she need not do anything to stress herself out. It means that she should not lift a finger. The woman states, "Personally, I disagree with their ideas. Personally, I believe that congenial work, with excitement and change, would do me good." (Pg, 42) I feel that Gilman shows the reader right away the correct medical treatment method. Gilman also slips in the damaging affects that are caused by the phosphites the woman takes. She writes, "My brother is a physician...and says the same thing. So I take the phosphates and phosphites." (Pg, 42) I believe it again points out that Gilman is mocking the medical treatment.
John, the woman's husband, went to medical school and the treatment he uses now is what he learned there. The author is pointing out that it is not personally his fault for the results of the patient, meaning his wife's results. It seems that Gilamn is focusing on the fact that medical doctors are not listening to women patients and becoming aware that women need to be open with their problems. Otherwise they cannot be curred.
It seems that Gilman is trying to explain the problems of the medical treatments for women, in my opinion, is outstanding. Mixing a light tone of writing, using setting poperfully, and ensuring the woman in the story that she is sane for the start. Overall, the short story is a success in acheiving those goals