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A book about choices. A book to empower all cancer sufferers and
their families. In March 2011 Laura Bond's mother Gemma was
diagnosed with ovarian and uterine cancer. Laura discovered that
the only thing more shocking than telling someone your mother has
cancer was revealing that she had declined chemotherapy. But,
according to studies, many oncologists would do the same. So Laura,
a journalist, started writing a blog to explain her mother's
decision to say 'no' to mainstream medicine and 'yes' to hydrogen
peroxide, vitamin C injections and infrared saunas. Mum's Not
Having Chemo shares Gemma's natural healing story as well as advice
from over 60 of the world's leading cancer specialists and holistic
healers - from oncologists in Tokyo to energy healers in Harley
Street. If you want to explore alternative options, or find ways to
supplement your conventional care, this book provides cutting edge
research from around the world and describes treatments road-tested
by Gemma and other cancer survivors. It's an invaluable and
uplifting companion to help you make the best choices for your own
healing journey.
Gertrude Stein was at heart an artist's writer. She became
well-known to the literary mainstream with "The Autobiography of
Alice B. Toklas," and was at her most accessible with her speech
and autobiographical writing of her later years. It is with
collections such as "Geography and Plays," however, that Stein
showcased the possibilities of the English language to transcend
beyond literature into the realm of modern art. The page was her
canvas, and as the Cubist painters of her time treated their
subjects, Stein re-assembled words in an abstracted form to present
them in a greater context, a context un-tethered by a singular
viewpoint. This modern edition contains a massive collection of
over 50 different works by Gertrude Stein. In addition to the
daring and cheeky "Miss Furr and Miss Skeene," this revitalized
edition contains many of her most radical and influential works.
There is "Ada," one of Stein's many word portraits of famous
personages, this one written of Alice B. Toklas. There is "Every
Afternoon: A Dialogue," a conversation between two unnamed people
highlighting the writer's playful, often humorous style. Also
included is "Sacred Emily," in which the reader finds Stein's most
often quoted line, "Rose is a rose is a rose is a rose," a line
that employs her trademark use of repetitive language to express
that things are what they are, but at the same time, so much more.
In Stein's view, the simple naming of a thing already invokes the
imagery and emotions associated with it-the writer does not need to
manipulate the word any further.
Meet Julian West, who falls asleep in Boston for over a hundred
years... then wakes to find himself in a futuristic socialist
utopia, where people retire at 45 to live out the rest of their
lives in leisure. His guide in this brave new America is Doctor
Leete, with whom he discusses the wonders he encounters and the
perils he envisions. These social-minded dialogues range from
discussing religion, an improved legal system and class equality,
to the use of credit cards, overnight deliveries, and the dangers
of the stock market. Edward Bellamy wrote "Looking Backward" in
1887, and the descriptions of his futuristic socialist utopia
quickly ignited spirited debate, and led to a political movement
which came to be known as Nationalism. The book also inspired the
creation of new utopian communities, as well as influencing over a
century of urban planning, including the Garden city movement in
England. This full size collectible edition has been designed for
students and scholars, and features a new introduction, as well as
a contemporary look at the life and influence of Edward Bellamy. It
has been updated, indexed and completely restored for a modern
audience. Excerpt from "Looking Backward by Edward Bellamy - A
Utopian Novel" (Chapter 26) Reprinted by permission. All rights
reserved. "It was the sincere belief of even the best of men at
that epoch that the only stable elements in human nature, on which
a social system could be safely founded, were its worst
propensities. They had been taught and believed that greed and
self-seeking were all that held mankind together, and that all
human associations would fall to pieces if anything were done to
blunt the edge of these motives or curb their operation. In a word,
they believed - even those who longed to believe otherwise - the
exact reverse of what to us seems self-evident; they believed, that
is, that the antisocial qualities of men, and not their social
qualities, were what furnished the cohesive force of society.... It
seems absurd to expect anyone to believe that convictions like
these were ever seriously entertained by men...." "With a tear for
the dark past, turn we then to the dazzling future, and, veiling
our eyes, press forward. The long and weary winter of the race is
ended. Its summer has begun. Humanity has burst the chrysalis. The
heavens are before it." Critical reviews for Looking Backward ""One
of the most remarkable books ever published in America... it is one
of the few books ever published that created almost immediately on
its appearance a political mass movement."" --Erich Fromm ""While
almost prophetic in its 19th century predictions of many modern
contrivances, socially, 'Looking Backward' stands in stark contrast
to America as it exists in the grip of the early 21st century world
economic recession. Yet even more than a century after it was
written, Bellamy's masterpiece now burns even brighter as a beacon
of hope for class equality and the ideas associated with Christian
socialism."" --Shawn Conners, editor of "Men & Women by Robert
Browning - Transcendentalism: A Poem in Twelve Books"
Once considered a writer of "slick" magazine stories intended for
mass consumption, F. Scott Fitzgerald is now regarded as one of the
finest literary craftsmen of his, or of any other, generation.
Entrenched in the milieu of the reckless 1920's, his stories
reflect the carefree, impetuous attitude of the time, but they also
go far beyond providing a mere snapshot of a generation. Fitzgerald
established himself as a master at entwining romanticism with
realism. He dissected class differences with a surgeon's precision.
He exalted the Jazz Age fantasy of glorious excess even as he tore
it apart.
"Glittering Things: Flappers, Fantasies & Tales of the Jazz
Age" contains a solid compendium of early works by Fitzgerald-a
time when he was at his most experimental in terms of themes and
techniques, as well as a time when he was at his most influential
with the public. Included in this special edition is the novelette
"Winter Dreams," a story that would eventually become his
masterpiece, The Great Gatsby. Also included are "May Day" and "The
Diamond as Big as the Ritz," two of the most well-regarded pieces
in the Fitzgerald canon, offering the writer's candid analysis of
the darker side of the Jazz Age's quest for excess. Fitzgerald's
trademark wit and mastery of dialogue are also well represented
with the stories "The Camel's Back," "Porcelain and Pink," and "The
Curious Case of Benjamin Button."
F. Scott Fitzgerald helped give voice to a generation engaged in
"purposeless splendor." More importantly, his works have become
essential to understanding the uniquely American themes of social
class conflict, ill-omened idealism, and the all-encompassing
"pursuit of happiness." These classic stories are now inexorably
woven into the American literary landscape.
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