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Raising Grandkids focuses on "skipped generation" families or
grandparent-headed households. Collecting together stories from
other grandparents and reflecting on his own experience as a
caregiver to his step-grandchildren, Gary Garrison paints a
compassionate yet compelling picture of the joys, fears, and
passions that drive some grandparents to put their later lives on
hold to raise their children's children. Grandparents in this
situation have particular challenges, as they often have to battle
their own children for custody, deal with pressures from
caseworkers, negotiate their own health and financial issues, and
address the guilt and resentment they may feel towards the missing
son or daughter who conceived the children now in their care. As
well, many fear their grandchildren will be taken away, which keeps
them silent and isolated. This fear can be particularly profound
for Indigenous and Metis grandparents, who bear intergenerational
wounds of racism and genocide, as they struggle to create a better
future for themselves and their grandchildren. No matter their
background, grandparents looking for comfort, guidance, and wisdom
will find meaning in this brave and clear-eyed book.
"A story of courage and boundless compassion." - Stephen Reid In
Human on the Inside , Gary Garrison takes readers out of their
comfort zones and into "The Max," one of Canada's most notorious
and violent prisons, introducing us to a menacing yet vibrant
subculture of inmates, guards, and staff. Through personal stories,
Garrison illuminates a criminal justice system that ignores
poverty, racism, mental illness, and addiction and deals instead
with society's problems with razor wire and harsh treatment. It is
a system that degrades the individual and sees inmates as less than
human. Providing a counterbalance to fear-mongering about
criminals, he argues that a dehumanizing system generates more
crime, not less, and perpetuates another injustice, this time
committed on behalf of all Canadians.
A More Perfect Ten is a revision of Gary Garrison's pioneering book
on writing and producing the 10-minute play, and it is now the most
authoritative book on this emerging play form.
The 10-minute play has become a regular feature of theatre
companies and festivals from coast to coast, and Garrison has
distilled the advice of many of those people who had been
instrumental in promoting the ten minute play for the last few
years.
Replete with advice and tips on creating the successful
10-minute play, and cautions for avoiding the pitfalls, this new
edition also includes addresses for the biggest and most important
ten-minute festival opportunities, new sample ten minute plays and
questions for thought and discussion, and sample layout templates
for laying out the play for submission. The savvy playwright at any
level of skill can use this little book to great advantage. Plus
Gary Garrison is warm, funny, irreverent, and essential.
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