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For fans of Tina Fey, Amy Poehler, Amy Schumer-and every other
"funny woman"-comes a candid feminist comedy manifesto exploring
the sisterhood between women's comedy and women's liberation. "I'm
not funny at all. What I am is brave." Lucille Ball From female pop
culture powerhouses dominating the entertainment landscape to
memoirs from today's most vocal feminist comediennes shooting up
the bestseller lists, women in comedy have never been more
influential. Marking this cultural shift, The Girl in the Show
provides an in-depth exploration of how comedy and feminism have
grown hand in hand to give women a stronger voice in the ongoing
fight for equality. From I Love Lucy to SNL to today's rising cable
and web-series stars, Anna Fields' entertaining retrospective
combines amusing and honest personal narratives with the
historical, political, and cultural contexts of the feminist
movement. With interview subjects like Abbi Jacobson, Molly
Shannon, Mo Collins, and Lizz Winstead among others as well as
actresses, stand-up comics, writers, producers, and female comedy
troupes Fields shares true stories of wit and heroism from some of
our most treasured (and under-represented) artists. At its heart,
The Girl in the Show captures the urgency of our continued struggle
towards equality, allowing the reader to both revel in and rebel
against our collective ideas of "women's comedy."
This title discusses of the school system differences and
similarities between Finland and the United States. What are the
differences? Why Finns score higher in international tests? Why the
American students cannot apply their knowledge in real life
situations? The current debate in educational issues during the
U.S. presidential campaign in 2012 has also addressed this subject.
Reading the Chronicles of an Appalachian Woman will inspire one
with hope. Todays culture consist of extraordinary lack but be
assured that there are positive solutions in a crying and dying
generation. Kay is a Christian single woman who made the story
'from nothing to something.' She was homeless with five children
and she reveals her secrets to a successful career. Kay put God in
remembrance of his promises. God's revealing word that declares
provision, independence, housing, transportation, and
entrepreneurship. The Beauty Shop, a God given dream, was an
inspiration and flourished as a place of ministry while gaining
community respect. Through overcoming her own personal struggles,
she was able to give others hope by the way of compassion, prayer,
and shining the Light of God to others.
A fond, funny Southern-fried memoir about growing up a proper young
lady...or not.
How does a North Carolina native go from being a tomboy with
catfish guts on her overalls to becoming the next Scarlett O'Hara?
Turns out, it's not so easy. Too smart, too tall, too fat, too
different...Anna Fields was a dud at debbing.
From tea parties to teased hair to where to hide mini bottles of
liquor inside poufy crinoline ballgowns, Anna reveals all-in a
hilarious, behindthe-scenes glimpse into Deb Culture, where for a
Southern belle, "the proof is in the pouf."
Unless, of course, she rebels...
Four Souls begins with Fleur Pillager's journey from North Dakota
to Minneapolis, where she plans to avenge the loss of her family's
land to a white man. After a dream vision that gives her a powerful
new name, Four Souls, she enters the household of John James
Mauser. A man notorious for his wealth and his mansion on a hill,
Mauser became rich by deceiving young Indian women and taking
possession of their ancestral lands. What promises to be a
straightforward tale of revenge, however, slowly metamorphoses into
a more complex evocation of human nature. The story of anger and
retribution that begins in Tracks becomes a story of healing and
love in Four Souls.
When the sister of "Baby Killer" Kennerman asks for help, attorney
Barbara Holloway reluctantly looks into matters and finds that
incompetent lawyers and a smear campaign from the local right-wing
press are going to allow a killer to go free.
Alice Brill wakes up one day with a vague, but nagging sensation of
unease in her chest that signals trouble. Is it her
marriage--drifting along for years on auto-pilot--that's so
troubling? Her unrealized aspirations as a writer? Her unsettled
younger son? Or is it something about her father, once a prominent
surgeon but now slipping deeper into senility in a nursing home?
There is also the matter of the writer whose book she's editing, in
her new profession as a "book doctor," with whom a deeper
involvement looms. This is a smart, beautifully observed novel
about a woman coming to terms with the hidden truths of her life.
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