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A Piece of Cake: A Memoir, by Cupcake Brown

A Piece of Cake: A Memoir, by Cupcake Brown


A Piece of Cake: A Memoir, by Cupcake Brown


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A Piece of Cake: A Memoir, by Cupcake Brown

About the Author

Cupcake Brown practices law at one of the nation’s largest law firms and lives in San Francisco. Visit her website at cupcakebrown.com.From the Hardcover edition.

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Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

1 The booming music coming from Momma’s radio alarm clock suddenly woke me. I could hear Elton John singing about Philadelphia freedom. I wonder why Momma didn’t wake me? I thought to myself. It was January 1976. Wasn’t no school that day. But Momma still had to go to work. So, while Momma was at work, I was goin’ over to Daddy’s house to play with Kelly, the daughter of his lady friend. I wonder why she didn’t wake me? I thought again to myself as I climbed out of bed. When I passed the dresser I caught a glimpse of myself in the mirror. Boy, was I ugly. “Skinny, black, and ugly.” That’s what the kids at school called me. Or they’d yell out, “Vette, Vette, looks just like my pet!” My name was La’Vette, but my first birth name was Cupcake. At least that’s what my momma told me. Seems Momma craved cupcakes when she was pregnant with me. She had three cupcakes a day, every day, without fail, for nine and a half months (I was two weeks overdue). Momma said that even if she didn’t eat anything else, she’d have her daily dose of cupcakes. Anyway, seems that while “we” were in labor, the hospital gave Momma some pain drugs. Once Momma popped me out, the nurse said: “Pat”—that was my momma’s name—“you have a little girl. Do you know what you want to name her?” Tired and exhausted from eight hours of hard labor, Momma lifted her head, smiled sheepishly, and said, “Cupcake,” before she passed out. So that’s what they put down on my birth certificate. I mean, that is what she said. (The nurses thought it was due to the excitement of motherhood, Momma said it was the drugs). A few hours later, however, when Daddy came to the hospital he decided he didn’t like “Cupcake.” Momma said Daddy wanted to name me La’Vette. So, just to make Daddy happy, Momma said she had the hospital change my name. I didn’t mind, really. I loved my daddy; so as far as I was concerned, he could change my name to whatever he wanted. But, Momma said that to her I would always be Cupcake. She never called me anything else, ’cept sometimes she called me “Cup” for short. Anyway, the kids at school always told me that I was ugly. They teased me, saying I looked like “Aunt Esther,” that old lady from Sanford and Son, the one always calling Sanford a “fish-eyed fool.” She was the ugliest woman I’d ever seen. So if the other kids thought I looked like her, I knew I had to be ugly. Besides, everybody knew a black girl wasn’t considered pretty unless she was light-skinned with long straight hair. I was dark-skinned with short kinky hair. I hated my complexion. I hated my hair. I hated my skinny legs and arms. But, my momma thought I was beautiful. She’d say: “Cup, you’re only eleven years old. You will appreciate your beauty as you grow up.” Shoot, I couldn’t wait to grow up! Momma always said things to make me feel better. I loved my momma. She was my best friend and she was beautiful: she had cocoa-colored skin and her long black hair hung way past her shoulders. And, Momma had the biggest, prettiest smile you ever saw. People always told her that she looked like Diana Ross because of her long hair and wide beautiful smile—all teeth. I passed the black ugly thing in the mirror and continued toward Momma’s room. The radio alarm continued to blast. I giggled to myself. Momma was like me. She hated getting up in the morning, so she put the clock way across the room and turned it all the way up so it would scare her awake in the morning. That way, she’d have to get out of bed and walk across the room to turn it off. I wonder why she didn’t turn the alarm off? I thought as I made my way through the kitchen toward the large living room that led into Momma’s room. The floor was cold because wasn’t no carpet in our house. Still, I loved our old house. It was Victorian style, three bedrooms and one bathroom. We lived in San Diego in the heart of the ghetto, though I never knew it until I got older. We had our share of dilapidated houses, and run-down apartment buildings, but most of the houses and apartments in the neighborhood were in decent order. I mean, we didn’t have any mansions, but most folks made sincere efforts to keep their houses decent-looking: they watered their tired brown lawns, trying to keep them up (as kept up as a lawn could be with kids runnin’ over it all the time), and tried to replace windows that had been broken from runaway fly balls that escaped the imaginary fields of street baseball games. We had a great neighborhood store, Sawaya Brothers, that had everything you could need or want, including the most delicious pickled pig feet. We had a neighborhood park, Memorial Park, a boys’ club and a girls’ club. I thought my family was rich because I was the only kid in the neighborhood who had her own bedroom, furnished with a white princess-style bedroom set complete with a canopy bed, matching nightstands, and dresser. There was a pink frilly comforter with matching frills for the canopy overhead. And, I had a closet full of clothes. Unlike other kids in my neighborhood, I never had to share clothes or wear hand-me-downs. Momma loved to sew and made most of my clothes. The other kids thought we were rich too. Little did we know that we weren’t rich—it’s just that both my mom and dad worked while the other kids only had one parent trying to raise several kids either on one income or, more commonly, on welfare, though being on welfare wasn’t nothing to be ’shamed about. Most everybody was. In fact, I envied my friends on welfare because they got government food that you couldn’t get from the store, like this great government cheese. You ain’t had a grilled cheese sandwich till you’ve had one made with government cheese. The blasting radio brought me back to my immediate mission: finding out why Momma didn’t wake me. I wished she’da woke me up, I thought as I followed the sound of the blasting radio. I was excited about going to my daddy’s. My momma and daddy didn’t live together. Daddy lived around the way with my brother, Larry. I hated Larry. Larry was thin and lanky like me. And he was dark-skinned like me. Although he was two years older than me, he never acted like a big brother. He never protected me. In fact, HE was usually the one I had to be protected FROM. And, usually, it was ME jumping in a fight to protect HIM. I thought he was a wimp. Larry hated me just as much as I hated him, but for different reasons. He was jealous of me. He’d never admit it, but I knew he was. I was the one who always got good grades and saved my weekly allowance so I could buy something nice and big, while Larry hated school (and was always on the verge of flunking out) and spent his money faster than he got it—and then had the nerve to get mad when he didn’t have anything left. Our hate for each other resulted in fierce fights: cussin’ each other out (a skill I’d turned into an art from an early age) and throwing knives and hammers (or anything else lethal we could find) at each other. Our fights were no joke. We were trying to kill each other for real, or at least cause loss of body parts. In our house, before Larry went to live with Daddy, I could never slack up and always had to watch my back because we were always trying to sabotage each other. Once I woke to Larry trying to smother me with a pillow. Bastard. He just woke up one day and decided he’d try to kill me. I had to fight, kick, scratch, punch, and scream to get him off me. I got him back, though: I tried to poi- son him. Larry was always trying to boss me around. One day, after yet another unsuccessful attempt at killing me, he’d ordered me to get him some Kool-Aid. And I did—with a little rat poison in it. But watching my sudden obedience, he got suspicious. Talkin’ ’bout he smelled “somethin’ funny.” He ordered me to take a drink first. I took a sip, but I didn’t swallow. I just held it in my mouth, hoping he’d now be willing to drink. He was smarter than I thought. He fucked around and fucked around twirling the Kool-Aid in the glass with a sly grin on his face till I couldn’t hold what was in my mouth anymore without swallowing. Oh shit! I thought, I can’t kill myself! That’d be right up his alley! I ran for the bathroom, which confirmed Larry’s suspicions that something was up. He ran ahead of me and blocked the bathroom door with his body, laughing hysterically at the irony of the situation. My only other option was out the front door—halfway ’cross the house. I’d never make it. “Swallow it, bitch!” he ordered, his body still blocking the doorway, hands up in the air like a soccer goalie. Damn, I hated him. But, I would have the last word on this one. It took me a moment to think of a way out, but then it came to me. As I realized my way out, the look of terror on my face from envisioning what seemed to be my impending death slowly changed into a wide-ass grin: I spit the Kool-Aid in his face. And with that, it was on—we tumbled, kicked, bit, and scratched, until we tired ourselves out and retreated to opposite ends of the house to await the next battle. So I was really glad when Momma sent Larry to go live with Daddy. Larry had started talking back to Momma, being smart-mouthed and sassin’ her. I remember the day Larry left. Momma told Larry to move a can of paint from off the back porch. Larry angrily stomped toward the paint can, but instead of moving it, he kicked it (as if punting a football), toward Momma. I don’t know if he meant for the can to hit her. But it did. The can flew into the air like a football toward a goalpost. It struck Momma on the shoulder as it made its way back down. The impact from the can hitting Momma’s shoulder caused the lid to topple off and paint flew everywhere. Momma stood there for what seemed like forever, although it was really only a moment, paint dripping off her clothes and face like icicles off a tree. I swear I thought I saw smoke coming out of her ears. She balled her fist. I thought she was going to knock the shit out of Larry (actually, I was hoping she would; then maybe I could get in a kick or two), but instead she spun suddenly and quickly on her heels (her long black hair flying out behind her reminded me of Batman’s cape), stomped into the house and, over to the phone, and called my daddy. “Come get this lil nigga fo I kill him!” she screamed. Needless to say, Daddy quickly came and Larry quickly went. Larry had lived with Daddy ever since. Daddy saved Larry’s life that day. — After Larry left, we really didn’t see much of each other; which was fine with both of us. Daddy and Momma would switch me and Larry on the weekends so each parent could spend time with the child he or she didn’t live with. This meant that Larry and I had to see each other only in passing (and even that was too much for me). I loved my weekends with my daddy. We’d dress up: Daddy would put on his one suit and I’d put on a nice dress and we’d go out on a date. We’d usually go somewhere for dinner and then to the movies. My daddy was the only person besides my momma who thought I was pretty. He’d hop me up on his knee and ask: “Who’s the prettiest girl in the whole wide world?” And, in between giggles, I’d say: “I yam.” But I never believed it. He HAD to think I was pretty. He was my daddy. When we were out on our dates, he’d ask everyone: “This is my daughter. Ain’t she pretty?” What were they going to say? “Actually sir, she looks like shit”? No, they smiled and lied and told Daddy I sho was pretty. I didn’t care that they were lyin’. I loved my daddy and I loved our dates. Didn’t bother me that Momma and Daddy didn’t live together either; they still loved each other. Daddy did have a lady friend, Lori—but to me, she was just that: his friend. Lori was a tall, thin white woman. She reminded me of Popeye’s girlfriend Olive Oyl, but I still liked her because she made the best chocolate cake (my favorite). I really liked her daughter, Kelly, a pudgy Mexican-looking girl with long black hair, only six months younger than me. Neither of us had a sister, so we decided we’d be each other’s sister. We played together and always had fun together. She didn’t mind being silly, and she was always willing to play my favorite game: Africans. I’d be “Unga-Bunga,” and she’d be “Oooga-Wooga.” We’d jump around with fake spears, acting a fool. I had no idea what it was like to be a real African so I imitated what I’d seen on TV. I didn’t know that TV was run by white folks. What do white folks know about being African? Nothing. But at the time I was too young (and really didn’t care) to know. Anyway, I couldn’t wait to get to Daddy’s house so Kelly and I could play. Why didn’t Momma wake me? I thought again as I continued walking toward her room, my head down in deep thought while I contemplated which outfit I would wear to daddy’s. I looked up and froze. I’ll never forget what I saw. The radio was still blasting in the background. Momma was lying facedown on her stomach. She was hanging off the side of the bed from her waist up. Her long black hair was hanging down, covering her face. Her arms hung limp to the floor. “Momma?” I asked, walking slowly toward her. The radio continued to blare. As I got closer, it seemed to get louder. “Momma?” I thought maybe she was kidding. Momma was always playing with me. Just the night before we were playing house and doing each other’s hair, dancing around and acting silly. I thought Momma was just playing another game, so I expected her to jump up like a jack-in-the-box and scream, “Boo!” But she didn’t move. I touched her arm. She was cool. I didn’t know what that meant, but I knew it wasn’t good. “Momma?” I repeated as I tried to lift her up by her shoulders so I could see her face. I didn’t know death was so heavy. When I tried to lift her, her body slid off the bed and onto me, and we both hit the floor with a thud. As she landed on top of me I heard a gurgling noise in her throat. She was heavy. Still I didn’t panic. It took awhile but I managed to squeeze myself from up under her and turn her over. She was so beautiful—even dead. I don’t know how I knew she was dead. I’d never seen death before. I just knew. I got up and slowly walked over to the nightstand where the phone lay and called Lori. “Hello,” Lori answered. “Lori, this is Vette. My momma’s dead.” I said it so casually, Lori thought she’d misunderstood what I’d said. “What’d you say?” she asked. “My momma’s dead.” I repeated in the same casual voice. “Are you sure?” “Yeah.” “Stay right there! I’m gon’ call your father!” I hung up and almost immediately the phone rang. I nonchalantly picked it up. “Hello.” “Punkin, this is Daddy.” My daddy always called me Punkin. Never “Pumpkin” always “Punkin.” Once I asked him why, and he said because when I was a baby, I had big chubby cheeks that made my face look like a little roun’ pumpkin, and ever since, he’s called me Punkin. I never had no problem keeping up with all of my different names. Momma called me Cup. Daddy called me Punkin. Everybody else called me Vette. “Hi, Daddy!” “Punkin, what’s going on?!” “Momma’s dead!” “Are you sure?” “Yeah, I’m sure!” We were screaming at each other because the radio was still blasting. I’d never turned it off. “Call the police, I’ll be right there!” he yelled before slamming down the phone. I didn’t call the police. Somehow I knew that once they came they’d take Momma away and I’d never see her again. So instead, I went back to her, scooted my little body under hers so I could put her head in my lap, and began singing our favorite song: “Chain of Fools” by Aretha Franklin. We used to play that song as we sang and danced around the house. In fact, we had just been dancing to it and singing it the night before. I hadn’t known then that that would be our good-bye party. It was then I began to cry. And that’s how Daddy found me a half hour later: sitting on the floor with Momma’s head in my lap, stroking her hair and, through my tears, singing “Chain of Fools.”

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Product details

Paperback: 480 pages

Publisher: Broadway Books (April 10, 2007)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 1400052297

ISBN-13: 978-0110000022

Product Dimensions:

6.1 x 1 x 9.2 inches

Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

4.6 out of 5 stars

938 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#10,987 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

I am not even sure what compelled me to purchase this book (months ago) except that I like biographies, especially ones that are meant to inspire, but upon having an extraordinarily realistic dream a couple of weeks ago about Cupcake Brown being the keynote speaker for the Gordon Parks Celebration (we live in his town of birth and my husband telling me Cup was not involved in this, much to my disappointment), I figured God was telling me it was time to read this book. I really do not have adequate words for this book. It truly was so much more than what I was expecting. I have struggled lately with varying aspects of my life and my relationship with God, and I think this book has helped me put a lot of things in perspective and seek God as I once did. While Cup and I do not appear to have very much in common (I'm currently a middle-aged stay-at-home white mom of three children), I can completely relate to a lot of things she experienced as a child that lead her down a wild path in order to numb the pain, having endured several things most people cannot fathom in their day-to-day life. In addition to the abuse suffered, so much of Cup's book resonated with me, like: learning as an adult what my childhood dreams were and that it is never too late to achieve them, learning to love and forgive myself and those who have hurt me, working through anger issues, learning to trust God and not be ashamed of my past. Cupcake is truly proof that God means it for good. I am grateful Cupcake shared her real story; it's inspiring and reaching people years after it has been told. If you are someone who is struggling in life, a wounded soul, or just looking for something inspiring to read, I would definitely recommend this book. You will not be let down!

It took me a while to get into this book because of the terrible things that Cupcake experienced and the choices she made but it is a very inspiring book that no matter what you have been through, how little you have, you can turn it around if you are determined and put the hard work in. Cup was able to accomplish so much near the end - I kind of wish more emphasis was put onto the amazing things near the end - after struggling to get to where she turns it around I didn't want the book to end because I wanted to hear more of the great things she has done. I have seen too many lives affected by drugs and this gives me hope that more people in situations like this can and do turn it around to become successful and have a rewarding life. My cousin battled with drugs and addiction from a young age and then when approaching 40 he got clean and went back to school. He just graduated at the top of his class and was hired with what I believe is one of his first jobs EVER and is doing fabulous. I am so proud that he made the decision and is doing so well now. He sees what it's like to live life to the fullest and is happier than ever. This book gives you a "good feeling" and I would recommend it to anyone looking for a motivational/inspirational story.Great job Cupcake Brown!! Thank you for sharing your story and I am so glad you were able to overcome all of the unfortunate situations you had to deal with through your life! I hope people dealing with an addiction can see that there is life without drugs and that they really can succeed if they have the determination.

I really like this book. It's heart-wrenching & angering & I had to take a break from it every now & then but it was awesome to read how she triumphed & overcame! I loved reading about how she pushed through & preseved & how God reached down & saved her. How He blessed her time & time again & surrounded her w/an encouraging group of ppl that wouldn't let her give up! Her relationship with God grew & in Him she found freedom. It's difficult to read what she went through but her testimony is so very worth it!

I thought this book was engaging and well-written. Although it is difficult to read about the things that Cupcake went through as a child I feel it is important to expose yourself to this type of information in order to maintain empathy for those around you. As a former social worker, I was taken back to my days as a child abuse investigator and the frustrations that I had with the system. I would like to say that it has improved a lot since the 70's and 80's but much of what Cupcake experienced still goes on. Hopefully reading this book will help others empathize with those in the foster care system, or products of it, and maybe spark some to advocate for change or become foster parents themselves. I would like to see an epilogue that updates what Cupcake has been doing with her life and her law degree.

If you do get this I recommend the audio book. The narrator brings it to life and I was hooked, listened to the whole book in less than a week!!! A great read but pretty blunt and vulgar at times so not for the faint of heart or for kids... do t let the name good you it’s not all cupcakes ... it’s the cold hard true of drugs, abuse, rape and just how much the body and soul can endure ...

Here it is, the book that will break you, rip your heart out and somehow piece it back together again. You will need multiple heart check breaks to keep up with everything Cupcake endured.Eleven, Cupcake was eleven when she found her mother dead, eleven when she was ripped from the only family she’s ever known and eleven when she was forced into womanhood. It was survival ever since.I appreciate Cupcakes honesty, her rawness, her unapologetic retelling of every emotion she had. I wanted to fight for her and wondered many times why no one stepped in and did right by her. I want to ask all of the adults she encountered if the money they received was worth torturing and taking away her childhood? I want to ask those men how they can live with themselves knowing what they had done.I would recommend this book. It’s a hard one to get through, but well worth it in the end.

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Download PDF Winnie: The True Story of the Bear Who Inspired Winnie-the-Pooh, by Sally M. Walker Jonathan D. Voss

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Winnie: The True Story of the Bear Who Inspired Winnie-the-Pooh, by Sally M. Walker Jonathan D. Voss

Winnie: The True Story of the Bear Who Inspired Winnie-the-Pooh, by Sally M. Walker Jonathan D. Voss


Winnie: The True Story of the Bear Who Inspired Winnie-the-Pooh, by Sally M. Walker Jonathan D. Voss


Download PDF Winnie: The True Story of the Bear Who Inspired Winnie-the-Pooh, by Sally M. Walker Jonathan D. Voss

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Winnie: The True Story of the Bear Who Inspired Winnie-the-Pooh, by Sally M. Walker Jonathan D. Voss

From School Library Journal

Gr 1–2—Readers will be captivated by this picture book account of the bear who inspired the "Winnie-the-Pooh" series. Walker tells the story of Harry Colebourn, a World War I soldier who came upon a man selling a baby bear at a train station (he had shot the cub's mother) and decided to adopt the animal. A veterinarian, Colebourn quickly became attached to the little bear he named Winnie (short for Winnipeg, Manitoba, Colebourn's company's hometown), who accompanied the soldier to a training camp in Quebec and became a favorite of the entire regiment. Winnie even went with the company to England when more soldiers were needed across the Atlantic. When Colebourn was sent into battle, he took Winnie to the London Zoo, where she was so gentle and tame that zookeepers sometimes let children ride on her back. There, Milne's young son, Christopher Robin, met her and fell in love, motivating Milne to pen the "Winnie-the-Pooh" books. Sweet, realistic illustrations, rendered in watercolor with pen and ink, lend the work an old-fashioned air, while a simple but gentle narrative provides readers with a sense of the emotional connection between Winnie and Colebourn. Back matter offers brief material on Colebourn, Winnie, black bears in general, and Milne's writings, as well as photographs of Winnie and Christopher Robin. Children will enjoy this interesting insight into the real story behind a beloved bear they already know so well.—April Sanders, Spring Hill College, Mobile, AL

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Review

“Beautifully illustrated with humanistic, old-fashioned washes, Walker's true tale is a low-key heart warmer about an unexpected interspecies bond.” —Booklist “Readers will be captivated by the fictionalized picture book account of the bear that eventually became the inspiration for A.A. Milne's acclaimed "Winnie-the-Pooh" series.” —School Library Journal “Ideal for Winnie the Pooh fans, this clear, straightforward biography reveals the bear behind the tale.” —Kirkus Reviews “Walker's short, descriptive text provides the essentials of the story,  and Voss's watercolor illustrations portray the unusual situation with a  mix of realism and humor.” —The Horn Book “This is an intriguing and well-written look at a different era....Voss' watercolor and pen and ink illustrations paint a casual and affectionate portrait of man and bear.” —Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books (BCCB)

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Product details

Age Range: 4 - 8 years

Grade Level: 1 - 2

Lexile Measure: 540L (What's this?)

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Hardcover: 40 pages

Publisher: Henry Holt and Co. (BYR); First edition (January 20, 2015)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 0805097155

ISBN-13: 978-0805097153

Product Dimensions:

8.3 x 0.4 x 10.4 inches

Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

4.8 out of 5 stars

111 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#49,236 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

As a substitute teacher, I carry the book in my school bog to read to students when there is "gap" time. The first time I read it was to 2nd graders. When I finished reading, I asked them if they liked it. All nodded but one shook her head and said, "I didn't like it: I loved it!" Third graders, 1st grade students, even fifth graders were delighted. High praise.Great way to tie fiction and non-fiction together and throw in some geography and history, too.

While this book was ok, be sure to order the award-winning version of the story which is so beautifully and poignantly told! It's "Finding Winnie: The True Story of the World's Most Famous Bear," by Lindsay Mattick. It's head and shoulders above this one. The story is told subtly and unfolds in a way that provides an element of surprise and awe. It is also told by family members of one of the principle characters, Harry Colebourn. Don't miss it!

I love the illustrations in this book, as well as the story behind Winnie-the-Pooh. My grandsons enjoy this book, the story, and the illustrations. It also includes some fascinating historical photos.

Love, love, love the story, the illustrations, and the whole idea that the story is based on truth! The end pages have prints of the real "Winnie" bear and Christopher Robin--very cool stuff.

Touchingly and beautifully illustrated and written, "Winnie" shows the bonds between animals and humans, in the form of a baby bear who responded with love to the solider who rescued her and to the regiment whose mascot she became. A legend from her days at the London Zoo, Winnie never forgot "her" soldier, who made certain she enjoyed a happy, safe life. Children and adults alike will love this book.

My 7 year son and I both really enjoyed this book. We both learned new things about Winnie-the-pooh. Easy to read, informative, and the art work was great. Pictures of Winnipeg, the real Christopher Robins, etc were a great addition. I highly recommend this book!

Another version of the Winnie the Pooh true story of the soldier who cared for this bear cub. I have read it twice and love the story. Can't wait to continue to share with my Grand children

This is a most fascinating story. Have read the series to all my many grands. But a bunch of them (the great readers) are getting this book even tho they are older. So fun and different! I am almost 80 and had never run across this book before Amazon! Thank u!!

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Winnie: The True Story of the Bear Who Inspired Winnie-the-Pooh, by Sally M. Walker Jonathan D. Voss PDF

Winnie: The True Story of the Bear Who Inspired Winnie-the-Pooh, by Sally M. Walker Jonathan D. Voss PDF
Winnie: The True Story of the Bear Who Inspired Winnie-the-Pooh, by Sally M. Walker Jonathan D. Voss PDF
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Free Ebook Visual Object-Oriented Programming Using Delphi With CD-ROM (SIGS: Advances in Object Technology), by Richard Wiener

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Visual Object-Oriented Programming Using Delphi With CD-ROM (SIGS: Advances in Object Technology), by Richard Wiener

Visual Object-Oriented Programming Using Delphi With CD-ROM (SIGS: Advances in Object Technology), by Richard Wiener


Visual Object-Oriented Programming Using Delphi With CD-ROM (SIGS: Advances in Object Technology), by Richard Wiener


Free Ebook Visual Object-Oriented Programming Using Delphi With CD-ROM (SIGS: Advances in Object Technology), by Richard Wiener

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Visual Object-Oriented Programming Using Delphi With CD-ROM (SIGS: Advances in Object Technology), by Richard Wiener

Review

Read the entire review of this book. Both the book Visual Object-Oriented Programming Using Delphi, by Richard Wiener and Claude Wiatrowski, and the newest version of Delphi arrived at my door within a few days of each other, so I thought it useful to combine a look at the new tool with a look at the text... Delphi is aimed primarily at developing multi-tier distributed database applications. The text, unlike the vast majority of its competitors, does not discuss database development at all. That is entirely okay by me; the majority of engineering computations I'm involved with do not involve databases either. The text does lead you through the development of several small apps that have instructive value. Chapter 5 will appeal to engineers, as it discusses the solution of, and presentation of the results for, a differential equation representing the control of a system. In Chapter 7, the authors boldly leap into component construction, which is another order of magnitude more difficult than creating drag-and- drop apps. -- Peter N. Roth, Dr. Dobb's Journal -- Dr. Dobb's Journal

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Book Description

To get the most out of Delphi, a programmer needs to understand and exploit the fundamental principles of object-oriented problem solving. This book is aimed at programmers and software developers who are involved with every aspect of the development cycle. Through case studies and numerous examples, the authors present an application-oriented guide to getting the most out of Delphi.

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Product details

Series: SIGS: Advances in Object Technology (Book 14)

Paperback: 576 pages

Publisher: SIGS (December 13, 1997)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 0136186386

ISBN-13: 978-0136186380

Product Dimensions:

7 x 1.3 x 9 inches

Shipping Weight: 2.1 pounds

Average Customer Review:

5.0 out of 5 stars

1 customer review

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#7,927,191 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

I tried to buy this book a while ago. It went out of print or I couldn't get it. It has been a while since I've seen a Delphi Book by Mr. Weiner. I'm shocked that it's here. Mr. Weiner is a excellent writer of computer books. He always covers a computer language in great detail. I was impress with seeing his coverage of Delphi before the book went out of print. Then I bought his Eiffel Book and was blown away. So I know this book is going to leave a mark. Warning! This book may be a hazard to your social life. I want it!

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Ebook Free Hue 1968: A Turning Point of the American War in Vietnam, by Mark Bowden

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Hue 1968: A Turning Point of the American War in Vietnam, by Mark Bowden

Hue 1968: A Turning Point of the American War in Vietnam, by Mark Bowden


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Hue 1968: A Turning Point of the American War in Vietnam, by Mark Bowden

Review

Praise for Hue 1968 One of the Wall Street Journal's top 10 nonfiction books of 2017 One of the Washington Post’s 50 notable works of nonfiction in 2017 An Amazon Top 100 book of the year Longlisted for the 2017 Andrew Carnegie Medal for excellence in nonfiction An ALA Notable Book of the Year A Christian Science Monitor, Kirkus Reviews, Military Times, Hudson Booksellers, and Chicago Public Library best book of the year "An extraordinary feat of journalism . . . Through his scrupulous day-by-day reconstruction of this battle, Bowden encapsulates the essential lessons of the Vietnam War . . . Hue 1968 is also an exploration of what is common to all wars: humankind's capacity for violence, cruelty, self-sacrifice, bravery, cowardice and love. Mr. Bowden undertakes this task with the talent and sensibility of a master journalist who is also a humanist and an honest man . . . the book is full of emotion and color . . . You will find the reading gripping."―Karl Marlantes, Wall Street Journal "A remarkable book."―Dave Davies, NPR's Fresh Air “[A] magnificent and meticulous history, which tells, with excruciating detail, a story that is both inspiring and infuriating . . . Bowden’s interviews, almost half a century on, with those who fought, on both sides, have produced unexampled descriptions of small-unit combat.”―George F. Will, Washington Post "Bowden . . . applies his signature blend of deep reportage and character-driven storytelling to bring readers a fresh look at the 1968 battle in the Vietnamese city of Hue . . . [A] compelling and highly readable narrative . . . A meticulous and vivid retelling of an important battle."―Linda Robinson, New York Times Book Review "An instantly recognizable classic of military history . . . Bowden tells this story with a power and a wealth of detail that no previous history of this offensive has approached."―Steve Donoghue, Christian Science Monitor "A gripping, and timely, history . . . powerful . . . [Hue 1968] is likely to claim a place on the shelf of essential books about the Vietnam War. Based on hundreds of interviews, news accounts, histories and military archives, the book combines intensive research with Bowden's propulsive narrative style and insightful analysis . . . What sets Bowden's account of the battle apart is his skill at moving from the macro―the history of the war, the politics surrounding it, the tactics of the battle―to the micro: the individuals, American and Vietnamese, who fought it and tried to survive it."―Colette Bancroft, Tampa Bay Times "Bowden is one of the great journalists of our generation, and with this book he provides a captivating account of the pivotal battle that did so much to alter the trajectories of not just the Vietnam War, but also American politics and our nation's global posture. With its capacious research that includes the perspectives of combatants and civilians, Vietnamese and Americans, presidents and privates, it epitomizes what a definitive account should be."―Foreign Policy “An engrossing, fair-minded, up-close account of one of the great battles in the long struggle for Vietnam.”―Washington Post, “50 notable works of nonfiction in 2017” "A masterful blood-and-guts account of the decisive battle in the Vietnam War . . . The heart and soul of Hue 1968 lies with its vivid and often wrenching descriptions of the 'storm of war' as soldiers and South Vietnamese citizens experienced it."―Minneapolis Star-Tribune "Bowden's excellent Hue 1968 . . . gives us the clearest picture yet of what happened in Vietnam and in Hue, where today tourists casually shoot pictures where murderous shots once were fired."―George Petras, USA Today, 4 out of 4 stars “In a 539-page narrative, Bowden delivers a work of grand ambition: impassioned, powerful and revelatory at its best, and the most comprehensive yet on the Tet Offensive’s bloodiest confrontation.”―Gregg Jones, Dallas Morning News “Mark Bowden’s book Hue 1968 is a must-read. Many lessons, including how government can lie and [the] role of an effective media in finding truth. Timely.”―Michael Morell, former acting director of the CIA "For readers who enjoy learning about battle tactics and bloody encounters, Bowden delivers, as he did in Black Hawk Down. The book offers so much more than that, however. For readers who care little about military strategy or precisely how each combatant died, Bowden offers copious context about why it matters what occurred in Vietnam at the beginning of 1968―why it mattered so much then, and why it matters so much in 2017 . . . Bowden is masterful in introducing characters whose names have often never appeared in the news but whose actions help explain the complications for the United States of becoming involved in faraway wars involving nearly invisible enemies."―Steve Weinberg, Philadelphia Inquirer "Dazzling . . . Bowden's account of the battle delivers gut punches from start to finish . . . Most impressive of all, Bowden deftly blends clear descriptions of complex troop movements with careful attention to the human impact of the fighting . . . Bowden deserves enormous credit for calling new attention to an often-overlooked battle and especially for recovering the experiences of those who fought amid otherworldly horrors."―Mark Atwood Lawrence, Boston Globe “Searing . . . Bowden revisits the historic battle with the same character-driven, grunt-level reporting style that made Black Hawk Down a bestseller. He lends a sympathetic ear to surviving soldiers on both sides, as well as guerrillas and civilians, and gives a vivid account of courage and cowardice, heroism and slaughter.”―Bob Drogin, Los Angeles Times “A powerful account of a critical battle in Vietnam . . . Bowden’s attention to detail is flawless . . . This kind of fine-tuned detail―and sense of mystery―is the soul of a good historical account . . . The book is a mighty piece of work, and as fine an account of a battle as you will likely read. Hell, I wish I had written it.”―Anthony Loyd, Times (UK) "Nearly 50 years after the battle for the city of Hue, this history reads as fresh as today's news . . . every page merits reading."―Military Times “An unsparing look at the Vietnam War and how it changed America.”―Monte Whaley, Denver Post, “Staff pick” “Smart, well-reported and hypnotic in spots.”―Joe Gross, American-Statesman “Hue 1968 pulls off a rare feat: it takes a conflict of terrible scale and consequence, and allows us to see it unfold at the street level, through the eyes of Vietnamese and American soldiers engaged in the struggle, journalists and activists observing the chaos, and the civilians caught in the crossfire . . . His emphasis on firsthand accounts gives a vital heart to the unfolding events . . . Not only are the personal stories Bowden uncovers at turns deeply moving and horrifying, but they also pose uncomfortable parallels with current events in the Middle East and Afghanistan.”―Sebastien Roblin, National Interest “Thoroughly researched and compelling . . . This is as much a book about what happens to peoples’ hearts, minds, and bodies in the swirling chaos of urban combat as it is a history of a specific battle and an assessment of its strategic significance. We come to know a fair number of the participants quite well by the end of the story―one source of the book’s unusual power and authenticity . . . With a novelist’s eye for evoking the grim atmospherics of a hellish locale and the characters within it, Bowden reconstructs dozens of scenes of heart-pounding combat . . . Bowden’s coverage of the ‘other side’ . . . gives this book a richer texture, and more balance, than any of the earlier books on Hue . . . Anyone looking to understand what Vietnam was all about would do well to read Hue 1968. Without a doubt, it’s one of the very best books to be written about Vietnam in the last decade.”―James A. Warren, Daily Beast “I am still recovering from the astonishment and appreciation of the reporting and writing in Mark Bowden’s latest book: Hue 1968, a story of a single battle that encompassed so much of what occurred in that epic year of our history.”―Mike Barnicle, Politico “A relentlessly immediate chronicle of the bloody, month-long centerpiece of the Tet Offensive . . . This is the definitive account of a turning point in America's Vietnam strategy and in public opinion about the war.”―Wall Street Journal, “top 10 nonfiction books of 2017” “[A] skillful, gripping account of the turning point of the Vietnam War.”―Christian Science Monitor, “30 best books of 2017” “Bowden confronts head-on the horrific senselessness of battle and the toll it takes on people, and he grants Hue the regard it deserves as a defining moment in a war that continues to influence how America views its role in the world.”―Publishers Weekly (starred review) "This Vietnam story reads like a movie but it's all true."―Courier-Journal (Louisville) "An extraordinary account of the most important and costly battle of the Vietnam War."―Don McCullin, legendary photojournalist who covered the Battle of Hue "In this meticulous retelling of one critical battle, Mark Bowden captures the nuanced and often invisible threads of America's political, military and cultural blindness in Vietnam. Hue 1968 is the new classic about America's Vietnam War."―Elizabeth Becker, author of When the War Was Over: Cambodia and the Khmer Rouge Revolution "A detailed, multifaceted account."―Tirdad Derakhsani, Philadelphia Inquirer “Thoroughly researched, this epic chronicle takes the reader back to a time when America still saw itself as invincible―and acted that way . . . fast-paced . . . A powerful piece of journalism.”―David Kindy, Providence Journal “An outstanding work of reportage and storytelling.”―Paul Davis, Washington Times “[A] master storyteller.”―John David, Decatur Daily “Bowden interviewed people on both sides, to great effect, and weaves a dense but compelling narrative about a battle that was a microcosm of the entire conflict.”―Alex Prud’homme, Omnivoracious, favorite reads of 2017 "A stirring history of the 1968 battle that definitively turned the Vietnam War into an American defeat . . . Building on portraits of combatants on all sides, Bowden delivers an anecdotally rich, careful account of the complex campaign to take the city. One of the best books on a single action in Vietnam, written by a tough, seasoned journalist who brings the events of a half-century past into sharp relief."―Kirkus Reviews (starred review) "An epic masterpiece of heroism and sacrifice, and a testament to the tragic futility of the American experience in Vietnam."―Booklist (starred review) “The best history of the battle for Vietnam’s imperial city of Hue.”―William D. Bushnell, Military Officer Magazine "In his monumental new book, Bowden . . . gives voice to dozens, including Nguyen Quang Ha, whose five-man team emerged from underground caves to strike the first blow for North Vietnamese forces, Bob Thompson, a career marine officer charged with taking back the US stronghold at the Citadel, President Lyndon Johnson and General William Westmoreland in Washington, DC and reporters David Halberstam, Michael Herr, Gene Roberts, Walter Cronkite and others who changed the way Americans perceived the war."―Jane Ciabattari, BBC.com "Hue 1968 unravels one of the great mysteries of our time―how a puny force of North Vietnam regulars and local sympathizers could without warning occupy South Vietnam's second largest city, hold it for a month, then disappear into the mountains, beyond reach and largely unbloodied. It turns out the force wasn't puny, but fanatical warriors who gripped their prey by the throat and wouldn't let go. They were unfazed by waves of counter-attackers, Vietnamese and American soldiers, but mostly Marines rushed in to defeat them. Hue 1968 shows the enormous challenges facing both sides and how they overcame them, or tried to. Did the Battle of Hue end up as a victory or defeat? The answer depends on who's asking and who's telling. Bowden takes on both roles and does it well."―Lieutenant Colonel Charles A. Krohn (ret.), author of The Lost Battalion of Tet "Hue 1968 is, by far, the most comprehensive (and balanced) coverage on this battle I've seen. Like never before, I've come to realize how narrow a perspective we low-level participants unavoidably had. While giving due respect to the abilities, actions and fighting spirit of the U.S. and ARVN Marines and soldiers who participated, Mark Bowden brought clarity to the larger intelligence, political and strategic shortcomings that made the prosecution of this battle so much more challenging and costly than it needed to be."―Brigadier General Mike Downs, USMC (ret.) "The longest and fiercest fighting of the Tet Offensive took place in and around Hue in early 1968 where Communist North Vietnam suffered a terrible military defeat. Yet the fight for Hue became a political victory for the leaders of North Vietnam and a turning point for US involvement and support for the war. Through searing personal accounts of many on both sides who were there, Mark Bowden reveals the intensity of the fighting. Relying on archival documents now available after 50 years, he also examines the considerations and decisions of political and military leaders at the highest levels. This book is a tragic tale of misunderstanding but also one of great heroism and sacrifice by those who fought in the streets of Hue and in the nearby rice paddies and villages."―Brigadier General Howard T. Prince II, USA (ret.), Commanding Officer, Bravo Company, 5/7 Cavalry, 1968 "Mark Bowden uniquely describes the battle from both sides of the front lines and vividly captures the remarkable courage and valor of those that participated in the crucible of war that was Hue City in January to March 1968. Surely to be an historical standard for the recollection of that Tet 1968 battle."―Colonel Chuck Meadows, USMC (ret.), Former Commanding Officer of Golf Company 2ndBn 5thMar "I am a US Marine Vietnam veteran who participated as a tank crewmen in the Tet 1968 battle for Hue City. I have read just about every written account of the month-long battle, and I have to say that all of the other well-written, well-documented accounts of the battle pale in comparison to Mark Bowden's Hue 1968. There is no more complete, accurate and detailed book. It reads like a novel even though is it made up almost exclusively of very personal accounts."―John Wear, president of the USMC Vietnam Tankers Association “Powerfully told, and a vivid depiction of individual courage and national hubris.”―William J. Burns, President of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace “The definitive history of the battle for Hue . . . It is a riveting account . . . of valor, heroism, rank foolhardiness, and unshakable camaraderie . . . More than anything, Hue 1968 is the story of the entire Vietnam War in microcosm.”―Michael M. Rosen, Claremont Review of Books

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About the Author

Mark Bowden is the author of thirteen books, including the #1 New York Times bestseller Black Hawk Down. He reported at the Philadelphia Inquirer for twenty years and now writes for the Atlantic, Vanity Fair, and other magazines. He is also the writer in residence at the University of Delaware. His most recent book is The Three Battles of Wanat: And Other True Stories.

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Product details

Hardcover: 608 pages

Publisher: Atlantic Monthly Press; First Edition edition (June 6, 2017)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 9780802127006

ISBN-13: 978-0802127006

ASIN: 0802127002

Product Dimensions:

6.5 x 2 x 9.1 inches

Shipping Weight: 1.9 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

4.6 out of 5 stars

1,086 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#12,863 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Reading this book made me uncomfortable for a lot of reasons. I was a young marine and part of the volunteer group that first went into Hue at the beginning of the battle. My outfit was 2/1, then at Con Thien, so I was only in Hue at the beginning and took no part in the serious fighting that came later.I thought the book was carefully researched, and well written, and as honest as he could be. My criticism is only that the author glosses over the fact that journalists did have a staggering effect on the fighting, and often their stories did fuel the anti-war movement back home.It occurs to me that if journalists had written about the Battle of the Bulge in the same tone that Walter Cronkite and others portrayed Hue, we would have sued for peace with Germany.However, the book is painfully accurate about what it was like to be in Vietnam, in the Tet of 1968, and what it was like to be in a firefight. I took no exception to his portrayal of those in leadership as being both competent and incompetent because it’s true of any organization. And I appreciate the portrayal of marines and soldiers who might not have ever gotten a thank-you back home, but who proved themselves hero’s every day.I recommend this book to anyone interested in the history of the battle.

5 StarsIf you only ever read one book about Vietnam, you could do a lot worse than Bowden’s “Hue 1968.” Other good choices would be Karnow’s “Vietnam: A History” and Sheehan’s “A Bright and Shining Lie.” However, Hue 1968 delivers not only the facts of the American tragedy in Vietnam , or even a particular point of view of the facts, but it also accurately depicts the feelings of the Americans serving in Vietnam, as well as those of Americans at home, and the Vietnamese who could not escape the war.I was a young marine in Vietnam at the time of the Tet offensive in 1968. I was not an officer and had no strategic view of the conflict. I didn’t even have a clear tactical view of the events in which I was directly involved. That said, Mr. Bowden’s book is such a profound telling of the events that I can almost smell the rice paddies. It is exactly this ability of Mr. Bowden that allows us the readers to either relive events from our own past or experience them ,as nearly as possible, as events that are worlds apart from our experience. He did it in “Black Hawk Down” and and again in“Guests of the Ayatollah.” And now he may have written the best book of his lifetime.Recommended: Absolutely.

Mark Bowden is an outstanding writer. I read a lot of books about Vietnam and Mr. Bowden goes into so much detail, that you really can put yourself right there in the battle. In fact, I was there. On January 31st 1968 I was with Echo battery2/11 in Phu Bai, the night the TET offensive started. We supported 2/5 at the time. Although I didn't set foot in Hue at the time of the battle, we dropped some 155mm shells on the city. We kept saying "why is 2/5 having such a hard time up in Hue". Little did we know that there were 4 regiments of NVA and VC in the city. I went back to Hue last year and visited the old imperial capital. When I walked down Le Loi street, I was overcome with emotion thinking of the Marines that were wounded and killed in that city.

This is an excellent book about a decisive battle in the Vietnam war that I had never really known much about despite reading several books about the war.If you've read any of the author's other books, you'll know what to expect--excellent research, good writing, accounts of both the macro and the micro issues. In this book, while the author provides some coverage of both the North Vietnamese and US (as well as civilians), most of the book concentrates on the US, in particular the Marines. The book is pretty even-handed between the sides, although there are few accounts of the actual fighting from the Vietnamese side. The author also provides in epilogue in which the subsequent fates of the many of the people is described, which is always nice.While the author paints a very sympathetic portrait of most of the marines and soldiers caught in the fighting, he generally has a veryr unflattering view of US higher commanders, who simply wouldn't believe that the North Vietnamese could take and hold a major city, because it did not conform to their preconceptions of what the enemy was capable of, or what strategy they would adopt. As a result, for several days after the city had fallen, US commanders sent laughably small contingents--individual companies of a couple of hundred men--to retake the city, occupied by up to 10,000 enemy troops. Commanders on the ground were ridiculed for their incompetence and timidity for their failures to retake the city, and ordered again and again into futile attacks.Westmoreland in particular comes in for withering criticism; he seems to have been so completely hoodwinked by the North Vietnamese that they were planning a major attack on Khe Sanh (which never came), that he dismissed the rest of the Tet offensive, and the battle in Hue in particular, as diversions by the crafty enemy to distract the Americans from the impending battle at Khe Sanh.I wanted to mention a few minor criticisms which didn't detract much from the book for me, but maybe more important to others:--the book includes too many characters which are mentioned a couple of times in the book, but that's it. This is particularly true for many of the civilians trapped in the city, but also for many of the soldiers, such as a Marine captain who was there from the first day of the battle and then rejoined the ARVN unit he advised in the citadel for the second half of the fighting--what was his experience with the ARVN troops like? Generally, it would have been interesting to find out more about the experiences of more people mentioned in the book.--speaking of ARVN, for some reason the author does not really cover them at all;--the author focuses almost exclusively on infantry, marines, and tankers, but it might be been interesting to hear from some of the sailors on the Mike boats, the helicopter pilots, etc.--while the book includes some maps, I think that more maps would have been helpful.

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Download In These Girls, Hope Is a Muscle, by Madeleine Blais

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In These Girls, Hope Is a Muscle, by Madeleine Blais

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In These Girls, Hope Is a Muscle, by Madeleine Blais

From Publishers Weekly

When Pulitzer Prize-winner Blais pokes gentle fun at Amherst, Mass., where an infuriated teen-aged athlete in the heat of the fray may yell, "You ignore your inner child!" you suspect this will be a special book. And it is, as the reader follows the Amherst High girls basketball team-the Lady Hurricanes-in the 1992-93 season, from game one on December 15 to the final game on March 16, when they all but obliterated Haverhill, 74-36, to win the state championship. While this is the story of well-bred, upper-middle class, genteel girls who learned to be tough, it is also a picture of a changing period in American sports history, when a town rallied around its female athletes in a way that had previously been reserved for males. Alternately funny, exciting and moving, the book should be enjoyed not only by girls and women who have played sports but also those who wanted to but let themselves be discouraged. Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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From School Library Journal

YA?A much-needed addition to sports writing for women, this is a true-life account of the development of a high school basketball team from Amherst, Massachusetts. Extremely readable and compact, the book spans from a disappointing season's end to a triumphant one the following year. It is anecdotal and details the physical and psychological efforts each girl put into the development of the team. The players' individual stories cover jealousies, antagonisms, practice habits, diverse family situations, and sexual harassment. There is a wonderful sense of community in the small-town New England setting, and plenty of local color. The building of the will to win as a team recalls such movies as Hoosiers or A League of Their Own, both of which the girls watched to psyche themselves up for the state championship game. A readable, compelling choice.?Frances Reiher, Fairfax County Public Library, VACopyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Product details

Hardcover: 263 pages

Publisher: Atlantic Monthly Pr; 1st edition (January 1, 1995)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 0871135728

ISBN-13: 978-0871135728

Product Dimensions:

6.5 x 1.2 x 9.2 inches

Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

4.4 out of 5 stars

33 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#1,544,113 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

I gave this book as a graduation gift to my players when it was first published. Its story and message have stood the test of time, and so it was given as a graduation present again to current players ...22 years later! Early on, it was one of the few books to follow a high school level girls' team as it pursued excellence and a state championship. The bonus for me: the epilogue included a follow-up of the players on that team.

As a former sportswriter and the father of a 10-year-old girl player, this is as good as it gets at capturing the essense of the sports experience from many angles. It's a story about women from a woman's perspective -- not a man's. The difference is what makes this a unique and insightful read. I bought it for my daughter, but I ended up reading it first. It's a "Hoosiers" story set in the 90s that is about girls, not boys. These are characters you care about -- and the fact that they're real makes it even better. Enjoy!

One of the best sports book I have ever read. Right up there with "Friday Night Lights" and "The Miracle of St. Anthony's." Beautifully written, it is a fascinating insight into a town and its people. Most importantly, it is a brilliant and heartwarming story of the importance of sports and friendship for girls. It is impossible not to love this book. I'm amazed that it hasn't been made into a movie yet.

Great story and beautiful words. Highly recommended for anyone looking for inspiration, or even just good storytelling.

Well done!

Incredible, inspiring story. We've given away many copies.

This book is filled with the most mundane details about each girl on the team, the town and people of Amherst and surrounding towns, local history, Emily Dickinson, the evolution of women's sports, etc., but it provides very little text about basketball itself. It devotes only a few pages in the whole book to describing anything that actually occurred during a basketball game. I read it with my 13 year old daughter, who is developing an interest in basketball, and it was a bit tedious for us both.

Every Female athlete should read it

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Get Free Ebook El Norte: The Epic and Forgotten Story of Hispanic North America, by Carrie Gibson

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El Norte: The Epic and Forgotten Story of Hispanic North America, by Carrie Gibson

Review

Praise for El Norte:“El Norte is the book that Americans, Anglo and Hispanic, should read as an education on their own American place or role . . . This is a serious book of history but also an engaging project of reading the future in the past . . . What is particularly fascinating about this book is that its encyclopedic project is not a rewriting of history but a recitation of readings. Almost each historical event is retold through memory, recording, evaluation, and discussion. This is history as dialogue. It leaves the mourning authority of archives and takes its place as a long conversation, presupposing that truth can be reached through an extended pilgrimage, a journey through violence, discrimination, racism, exploitation, and the inferno created by occupation.”―Julio Ortega, New York Times Book Review“[Gibson] writes engagingly of moments of violence and injustice, deprivation and discrimination, music and muses: Her paragraphs on the early-20th-century Texas society women who bickered over how to restore the Alamo, for instance, would do justice to the pen of an Edith Wharton.”―Felipe Fernández-Armesto, Wall Street Journal“A century before the pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock, the Spanish came to the Americas. This wide-ranging history traces the story of Spanish-speaking people in the New World, from Columbus through the Mexican-American War to the border wall.”―Newsday“In El Norte, Carrie Gibson torpedoes a popular understanding of North American history by searching beyond the Anglo-centric lens through which it’s often taught. By widening the lens of history and refocusing it on the Spanish roots of North America instead of the traditional focus on the continent after Anglo colonization, El Norte traces an underrepresented history of north America in accessible terms, all while doing some serious narrative-busting.”―Jezebel“Ambitious . . . [Chronicles] 600 years through the lens of Hispanic-infused geography, culture, and governance. In the telling, [Gibson] provides a revealing historical perspective on our current political climate. From today’s vantage point, very little of this complex and often bloody saga is admirable or inspiring, Still, Gibson tells it with authoritative gusto . . . Overflows with rich detail, revealing often startling truths that this reviewer, for one, never encountered in the textbooks of his adolescence.”―Washington Independent Review of Books“An ambitious history of the U.S. that focuses on the country’s often overlooked Hispanic origins . . . Gibson covers five centuries of events, people, and immense cultural shifts . . . Throughout Gibson gives full personhood to indigenous groups and tribes, placing their experiences in context, and she takes care to elucidate the evolving concept of race and the toxic trope of the U.S. as a white nation, an idea that stubbornly refuses to fade, resurfacing in our own divisive times . . . Gibson’s exhaustively researched and well-written chronicle is an essential acquisition for all American history collections.”―Booklist (starred review) “A sweeping and accessible survey of the Hispanic history of the U.S . . . Gibson uses this inventive and appealing lens to guide readers chronologically from the initial European incursions into the Western hemisphere to the present day . . . Unusual and insightful . . . Provides a welcome and thought-provoking angle on the country’s history, and should be widely appreciated.”―Publishers Weekly (starred review) “What does it mean to be Hispanic? Is one Hispanic if one does not speak Spanish or Portuguese, or does ethnicity extend beyond the borders of language? . . . Gibson soundly concludes that the history of the Spanish ‘is central to how the United States has developed and will continue to develop,’ lending further utility to her work. Though much of this history is well-documented in the scholarly literature, it’s undeniably useful to have it in a single survey volume for general readers.”―Kirkus Reviews “In this enlightening and exhaustively researched work, Carrie Gibson has accomplished the monumental task of recovering an extraordinary and consequential Hispanic past traditionally written out of American history. Her narrative is far reaching, vividly detailed, and a gift to assessing the American experience and evolving identity.”―Jack E. Davis, author of The Gulf: The Making of an American Sea, winner of the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for History “Carrie Gibson has written an epic history which will significantly change the way we look at American history, from the Georgia in which she grew up to the California coast. She chronicles the way in which Hispanic people―Spanish, Mexican, Cuban and Puerto Rican―shaped places like the American South and Southwest in a way not captured by our standard narrative, which inaccurately relies overly on British colonization and America’s westward expansion. In so doing, she challenges and dispels the stereotypes of the ‘Black Legend,’ which has cast Hispanics as villains in the American story, either cruel or incompetent or both. Along the way, she takes the readers on Spanish travels to the Chesapeake and Canada as well as settlements that stand to this day, from New Madrid, Missouri to Mesilla, New Mexico and Tampa. Her research is meticulous in detail and her writing propels the reader through 500 years to transport them to today.”―Richard Parker, author of Lone Star Nation: How Texas Will Transform America “A sweeping story of our Hispanic roots that links the dreamers of the Conquest with the Dreamers of the present, ranging across a continent’s history from first contacts in Florida to intersecting empires on Vancouver Island. In connecting places across the United States with their Hispanic pasts, Carrie Gibson connects our America with what one Cuban called Nuestra América, blurring borders at a time when others are building them up.”―Paul Gillingham, author of Cuauhtémoc’s Bones Praise for Empire’s Crossroads: “Gibson knows how to hold a reader’s interest with gems of fact and sometimes poetic prose.”―New York Times Book Review “Ambitious . . . With rare narrative verve and a gift for synthesis, Gibson compresses the islands’ histories into a wide-ranging, vivid narrative.”―Observer (UK), “Best History Books of 2014” “A rich and thorough history of the Caribbean from colonialism to the present day . . . Carrie Gibson’s thoughtful and extensively researched Empire’s Crossroads is a revelation. It is both a readable and in-depth study . . . A valuable work that is required reading for scholars and students . . . Impassioned and anecdotally rich.”―Christian Science Monitor “There can never be too many books about the Caribbean, a region whose diversity and cultural richness is unparalleled, and Carrie Gibson’s new offering is a welcome addition to the canon.”―BBC History (UK) “[An] epic history of the Caribbean . . . Vivid and thought-provoking.”―Spectator (UK) “Gibson’s social history focuses heavily on the destructive legacy of slavery, the bitter divisiveness of racism, and the brutality and inequalities of the opulent sugar plantations that dominated Caribbean economies for 300 years . . . Gibson tells [the story] in fluid, colorful prose peppered with telling anecdotes.”―Foreign Affairs “A marvelously rich and inclusive panorama of five centuries of Caribbean history . . . A work that brings fresh energy, assurance and insight to an area that is not often the focus of historians. Gibson’s study is sure to gratify academics, history buffs, and anyone intrigued by the Caribbean’s colorful, volatile, and multifaceted societies.”―Library Journal (starred review)

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About the Author

Carrie Gibson is the author of the acclaimed Empire’s Crossroads: A History of the Caribbean From Columbus to the Present Day. She received a PhD from Cambridge University, focusing on the Spanish Caribbean in the era of the Haitian Revolution, and has worked as a journalist for the Guardian and contributed to other publications, as well as the BBC. She has done research across Mexico, the West Indies, and the United States. She lives in London.

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Product details

Hardcover: 576 pages

Publisher: Atlantic Monthly Press (February 5, 2019)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 0802127029

ISBN-13: 978-0802127020

Product Dimensions:

6.5 x 1.8 x 9.5 inches

Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

4.0 out of 5 stars

3 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#2,026 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

At present it feels like more people are emboldened about aggressively pushing a message that amounts to this - the US, a nation that started as a a bunch of mainly English settlers on the east coast who pushed west into the wilderness, is in danger from those who come from south of the Rio Grande, whose distinct otherness threatens to undermine the identity of the United States.Of course this is all absolute nonsense, as should be made clear by any decent grasp of American history, and is made especially and undeniably obvious in Carrie Gibson's new book, "El Norte." In this comprehensive work, Gibson provides a sweeping and also eminently readable overview of Hispanic North America. Not only is it incredibly informative with its multi-leveled coverage, but from start to end this book strives to make it perfectly plain in every way possible that these regions, their peoples, and various cultures are very, very, very, very much a part of the United States, and that to try and argue otherwise (in good faith, at least) is simply not possible. "El Norte" is exactly the kind of books we currently need more of, and I greatly look forward to recommending it to others whenever possible.

Gibson provides a welcomed addition of the origins of the United States in its Spanish roots and explores how the country was formed from the South in Florida to the Southwest through Mexico. The history of the U.S. as seen through the development and loss of its Spanish and Mexican origins to its Anglo-centric is important in fully understanding the sprawling foundation of the country. Americans can't help but speak Spanish when naming Western states or places in Florida and yet many never understand why or if they are even speaking Spanish. The recent flap about Border Patrol questioning two women speaking Spanish in the state of Montana is a good example of this. Montana, of course, is derived from the Spanish word Montaña, or mountain. Americans are woefully under-educated when it comes to these origins. This is an important work as the country changes demographically and the Latino population increases in size and influence.

El Norte by Carrie Gibson is a free NetGalley ebook that I read in late December.Oop, this’ll likely have some carryover from reading América…. somewhat: the chapters are about the outcomes of individual cities between 1492 and the present day, though not quite from where you’d expect (i.e. obviously San Antonio, Nogales, and New Orleans, but also Santa Elena, SC, and New Madrid, MO). Gibson questions concepts of cultural ethnography, American multiculturalism alongside travelling through the bottom south of the United States, looping up to Alaska, then going back through the Midwest and into the East Coast. The cities in the chapters make up a shaky, loose, symbolic framework of the goings-on up until the 1800s when it becomes much more area-specific when talking about borrowing Cuban and Mexican culture, like art, music, dance and Zorro, Chicano activism for unionization, NAFTA, and politics and the immigration of refugees.

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