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Can We Come In and Laugh, Too? (Paperback)
Loot Price: R261
Discovery Miles 2 610
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Can We Come In and Laugh, Too? (Paperback)
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Loot Price R261
Discovery Miles 2 610
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Born in 1909, Rosetta was the youngest of a family of ten children.
They didn't have much money, but the riches of their zany antics
and laughter overflowed into the neighborhood. That love of
laughter continued throughout her long life. One of her fondest
childhood memories was when neighbors knocked at their door,
saying, "Can we come in and laugh with you?" Rosetta Schwartz
(later Rosetta Shifrin and finally Rosetta Lachman) wrote this
memoir in 1989 when she was 80 years old. Her daughter, author
Morgan St. James, uncovered it and edited it in 2012, adding her
own comments and those from some family members as Part II, along
with a reprint of "Shopping For Dancing Shoes," Morgan's short
story about Rosetta that is the first story in "Chicken Soup for
the Shopper's Soul." She was a shining light-an inspiration to all.
Her smile never dimmed, as seen on the cover photo taken by her
grandson Jason Pransky when Rosetta was 95 years old. She passed
away in 2006, just before her 97th birthday. We invite you to come
on in and laugh with her. FROM THE BOOK: Edna was only four years
older than me, but she took care of me like a little mother. Her
wonderful sense of humor added to the feeling that living in our
family was like being in a full time vaudeville show. There was
something going on all the time, and quite often she was the
instigator. We were the only family members to go to high school.
The others were lucky if they got to stay in school till the eighth
grade. Most of my brothers only made it to the sixth grade. As we
grew older, she changed roles from little mother to best friend.
Edna and I were as close as two peas in a pod our entire lives. She
was a very smart, independent person and her personality sparkled.
I loved being with her because she made me feel more confident
about what I could do. My brother Charlie's biggest ambition was to
be a drummer. He had begun to take lessons and would practice on
his board or anything else that had a hard surface and was
handy-walls, floors, sinks-you name it and Charlie drummed on it.
He usually started his drumming in the living room, but it was very
noisy. My mother chased him from the living room to the dining room
and from the dining room to the kitchen. Finally he wound up on the
back porch. Poor Charlie just couldn't win. As he drummed on the
porch, the neighbors complained about the noise, and from the porch
he went to the basement. But Charlie never gave up, kept practicing
and finally did become a drummer. From the time my brother Meyer
was in his late teens all the way to his early twenties, his only
desire was to be was an actor. We were living on Ogden Avenue at
that time and there was a huge mirror built into the living room
wall that went all the way from the floor to the ceiling. Meyer
bought a makeup kit and every day he stood in front of that big
mirror trying out a different kind of makeup and practicing lines.
One of my vivid childhood memories is that I never knew what my
brother would look like, because he tried so many different faces.
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