|
Showing 1 - 11 of
11 matches in All Departments
"Healing With Words: A Writer's Cancer Journey" is a compassionate
and wry self-help memoir written by an award-winning prolific
author, nurse and poet, who at the age of forty-seven found her
life shattered first by a DCIS (early breast cancer) diagnosis and
five years later by another, seemingly unrelated and incurable
cancer--multiple myeloma. The book includes the author's
experiences, reflections, poetry and journal entries, in addition
to writing prompts for readers to express their own personal story.
Raab's journals have provided a safe haven and platform to validate
and express her feelings. Raab views journaling to be like a daily
vitamin--in that it heals, detoxifies and is essential for optimal
health.
Readers will learn to: Understand the importance of early cancer
detection and how to take control of their own health Discover the
power of writing to release bottled-up emotions Learn how the
process of journaling can facilitate healing See how a cancer
diagnosis can be a riveting event which can renew and change a
person in a unique way
Praise for Raab's "Healing With Words":
"One woman's story, beautifully told and inspiring to those for
whom journaling will ease a cancer diagnosis."
--Barbara Delinsky, author UPLIFT: Secrets from the Sisterhood of
Breast Cancer Survivors
"Time after time, Diana articulates incisively the thoughts and
feelings that convey hoped-for meaning and encouragement. She is a
woman who knows what it is to live fully in the face of mortality.
She will add value to the life of every person who reads this book.
Healing With Words resonates at a spiritual level for me."
--Sena Jeter Naslund, author of Ahab's Wife and Abundance: A Novel
of Marie Antoinette
Author's proceeds from the sale of this book donated to benefit
the Mayo Clinic Foundation
Learn more at www.DianaRaab.com
Another inspirational book from Loving Healing Press
www.LovingHealing.com
HEA039031 Health & Fitness: Diseases - Breast Cancer
SEL501000 Self-Help: Journal Writing
MED058160 Nursing - Oncology & Cancer
"Writers On The Edge" offers a range of essays, memoirs and poetry
written by major contemporary authors who bring fresh insight into
the dark world of addiction, from drugs and alcohol, to sex,
gambling and food. Editors Diana M. Raab and James Brown have
assembled an array of talented and courageous writers who share
their stories with heartbreaking honesty as they share their
obsessions as well as the awe-inspiring power of hope and
redemption.
"Open to any piece in this collection, and the scalding,
unflinching, overwhelming truths within will shine light on places
most people never look. Anyone who reads this book, be they users
or used, will put it down changed. And when they raise their eyes
from the very last page, the world they see may be redeemed, as
well." --Jerry Stahl, author of Permanent Midnight
CONTRIBUTORS: Frederick & Steven Barthelme, Kera Bolonik,
Margaret Bullitt-Jonas, Maud Casey, Anna David, Denise Duhamel,
B.H. Fairchild, Ruth Fowler, David Huddle Perie Longo, Gregory Orr,
Victoria Patterson, Molly Peacock, Scott Russell Sanders, Stephen
Jay Schwartz, Linda Gray Sexton, Sue William Silverman, Chase
Twichell, and Rachel Yoder
About the Editors
Diana M. Raab, an award-winning memoirist and poet, is author of
six books including "Healing With Words" and "Regina's Closet."
She's an advocate of the healing power of writing and teaches
nation-wide workshops and in the UCLA Extension Writers' Program.
James Brown, a recovering alcoholic and addict, is the author of
the memoirs, " The Los Angeles Diaries" and "This River." He is
Professor of English in the MFA Program in Creative Writing at
California State University, San Bernardino.
From the Reflections of America Series
Modern History Press www.ModernHistoryPress.com
SEL006000 Self-Help: Substance Abuse & Addictions -
Alcoholism
SEL003000 Self-Help: Adult Children of Alcoholics
PSY038000 Psychology: Psychopathology - Addiction
The most striking fact revealed by investigations of insect
neurohormones is that insects are as well supplied with
neurohormones as mammals, since neurohor mones regulate not only
the functioning of the endocrine glands, prothoracic gland, and
corpora allata, but also most physiological processes. Our
knowledge of neurohormones developed originally from anat
omocytological investigations and experimental studies. Today,
accurate bio assays have been devised for studying both in vivo and
in vitro physiological processes, and RIA determination has yielded
knowledge of titer modifications of humoral factors. Much is also
known about neurohormone purification, and several neurohormones
have even been identified in different species. Immunocytochemistry
has made it possible to demonstrate in their origin and release
sites the presence of insect neurohormones whose structure has been
elucidated. Moreover, the presence of vertebrate and invertebrate
neuropeptides has been demonstrated in insects. As regards biogenic
amines, methods of detection have been greatly refined and it is
now possible to identify the cell bodies and axons of the main
biogenic amines. Other new methods, such as cobalt chloride
impregnation or Lucifer yellow staining, have revealed the axonal
pathways and the location of particular neurons. The mechanisms of
action of neurohormones have been investigated in several cases and
the results of these investigations will be related in the chapters
which follow."
1 Introduction The esophagus is a relatively simple though vital
organ. It consists of a two-layered muscular tube whose lumen is
lined by squamous strati?ed epithelium. Beyond its role of
propelling food from the pharynx to the stomach by a propulsive
contraction wave representing the esophageal phase of deglutition
(Conklin and Christensen 1994; Jean 2001), it is more and more
recognized as a sensory organ from which a variety of respiratory
and cardiovascular re?exes can be triggered, thus coop- ating with
the larynx in protecting the lower airways from aspiration
(Barthelemy et al. 1996; Lang et al. 2002; Lang et al. 2001; Loomis
et al. 1997; Medda et al. 2003). In ruminants, there is additional
antiperistalsis for regurgitation. During emesis, the esophagus is
a merely passive conduit except for some antiperistalsis in its
upper part. In the interval between swallows, both oral and aboral
ends of the esophagus are tonically closed by the upper and lower
esophageal sphincters, UES and LES respectively, while the tubular
esophagus is ?accid and partly ?lled with air. Despite this
apparent simplicity, neuronal control of esophageal functions is
quite complex.
"It is Easter Sunday, April 1945, early in the morning, maybe
just dawn. We stand still, like frozen grey statues. Us. Seven
hundred and thirty women, wrapped in wet, grey, threadbare
blankets, standing in the rain. Our blankets hang over our heads,
drape down to the soil. We hold them closed with our hands from the
inside, leaving only a small opening to peer out, so that we save
the precious warmth of our breath." ("from Chapter 5")
So begins the author's sojourn, her search for freedom that
begins with the chaotic barrenness in which she found herself after
her liberation on Easter Sunday, April 1945, and takes her across
several continents and half a lifetime.
Raab paints a brief yet moving picture of her idyllic life
before her internment and the shock and the horrors of Auschwitz,
but it is in the images of life after her liberation, that Raab
imparts her most poignant story -- a story told in a clear, almost
sparse, always honest style, a story of the brutal, and, at times,
the beautiful facts of human nature.
This book will appeal to a number of audiences -- to readers
interested in human nature under the most trying circumstances, to
historians of World War II or Jewish history, to veterans and their
families who lived through World War II, and to those interested in
politics and the evils of political extremism.
Shortlisted for the 1998 Edna Staebler Award for Creative
Non-fiction.
Winner of the 1999 Jewish Book Committee award for best
Holocaust memoir.
"Writers On The Edge" offers a range of essays, memoirs and poetry
written by major contemporary authors who bring fresh insight into
the dark world of addiction, from drugs and alcohol, to sex,
gambling and food. Editors Diana M. Raab and James Brown have
assembled an array of talented and courageous writers who share
their stories with heartbreaking honesty as they share their
obsessions as well as the awe-inspiring power of hope and
redemption.
"Open to any piece in this collection, and the scalding,
unflinching, overwhelming truths within will shine light on places
most people never look. Anyone who reads this book, be they users
or used, will put it down changed. And when they raise their eyes
from the very last page, the world they see may be redeemed, as
well." --Jerry Stahl, author of Permanent Midnight
""Writers On The Edge" is a thoughtful compendium of first-person
narratives by writers who have managed to use their despair to
create beauty. A must-read for anyone in the recovery field."
--Leonard Buschel, Founder, Writers In Treatment CONTRIBUTORS:
Frederick & Steven Barthelme, Kera Bolonik, Margaret
Bullitt-Jonas, Maud Casey, Anna David, Denise Duhamel, B.H.
Fairchild, Ruth Fowler, David Huddle Perie Longo, Gregory Orr,
Victoria Patterson, Molly Peacock, Scott Russell Sanders, Stephen
Jay Schwartz, Linda Gray Sexton, Sue William Silverman, Chase
Twichell, and Rachel Yoder
About the Editors
Diana M. Raab, an award-winning memoirist and poet, is author of
six books including "Healing With Words" and "Regina's Closet."
She's an advocate of the healing power of writing and teaches
nation-wide workshops and in the UCLA Extension Writers' Program.
James Brown, a recovering alcoholic and addict, is the author of
the memoirs, " The Los Angeles Diaries" and "This River." He is
Professor of English in the MFA Program in Creative Writing at
California State University, San Bernardino.
From the Reflections of America Series
Modern History Press www.ModernHistoryPress.com
SEL006000 Self-Help: Substance Abuse & Addictions -
Alcoholism
SEL003000 Self-Help: Adult Children of Alcoholics
PSY038000 Psychology: Psychopathology - Addiction
"Healing With Words: A Writer's Cancer Journey" is a compassionate
andwry self-help memoir written by an award-winning prolific
author, nurse andpoet, who at the age of forty-seven found her life
shattered first by a DCIS(early breast cancer) diagnosis and five
years later by another, seemingly unrelatedand incurable
cancer--multiple myeloma. The book includes the
author'sexperiences, reflections, poetry and journal entries, in
addition to writingprompts for readers to express their own
personal story.Raab's journals have provided a safe haven and
platform to validate and expressher feelings. Raab views journaling
to be like a daily vitamin--in that itheals, detoxifies and is
essential for optimal health.
Readers will learn to: Understand the importance of early cancer
detection and how to take control of their own healthDiscover the
power of writing to release bottled-up emotionsLearn how the
process of journaling can facilitate healingSee how a cancer
diagnosis can be a riveting event which can renew and change a
person in a unique way
Praise for Raab's "Healing With Words"
"One woman's story, beautifully told and inspiring to those for
whomjournaling will ease a cancer diagnosis."
--Barbara Delinsky, author UPLIFT: Secrets from the Sisterhood of
Breast Cancer Survivors
"Time after time, Diana articulates incisively the thoughts and
feelings thatconvey hoped-for meaning and encouragement. She is a
woman who knowswhat it is to live fully in the face of mortality.
She will add value to the life ofevery person who reads this book.
Healing With Words resonates at a spirituallevel for me."
--Sena Jeter Naslund, author of Ahab's Wife and Abundance: A Novel
of Marie Antoinette
Author's proceeds from the sale of this book donated to benefit the
Mayo Clinic Foundation
Learn more at www.DianaRaab.com
Another inspirational book from Loving Healing Press
www.LovingHealing.com
HEA039031 Health & Fitness: Diseases - Breast Cancer
SEL501000 Self-Help: Journal Writing
MED058160 Nursing - Oncology & Cancer
Diana Raab will write anywhere about anything to not only rid
herself of childhood "ails" but to enjoy herself completely, even
poking fun at her foibles. She takes a close and courageous look at
all her life's experiences, and in so doing, shares her wisdom and
forgiveness of self and others with a raw honesty that is both
refreshing and inspirational. Her poems are, as she writes of her
ancestors, "bright candles trembling in their own wax."
Perie Longo,
Santa Barbara Poet Laureate Emerita, author of With Nothing Behind
But Sky
The poems in Diana Raab's The Guilt Gene deftly delineate the
stages of a woman's life. From the quotidian chores of walking the
dog and picking up dry cleaning to the small miracle of finding
three whole watermelons on the beach, Raab savors her American life
and invites you to join her.
Molly Fisk, Listening to Winter
The Guilt Gene is a prism with a hundred facets offering glance
and glimpse and deep seeing into encounters with love, loss,
longing, and epiphany. From an author who has taught us the power
of memory and story, these poems take us along the road from a
World War II typewriter to the eyes of an old dog. Poetry here
reminds us to heed what calls to us daily.
Kim Stafford,
The Muses Among Us: Eloquent Listening and Other Pleasures of the
Writer's Craft
The Guilt Gene, Diana Raab's second book of poetry, has the
straight-forward confessional tone that distinguishes her best work
whether in prose or poetry. Eschewing high flying metaphor and
dressed up formality, she confines her subject matter to her inner
life and her journal-keeping voice and makes her poems through an
emphasis on the line. Her poetry does not pretend to have figured
things out; rather, this work is her process of figuring them out,
of sorting her past and contemplating her present. The best of
these poems derive their beauty from a disarming frankness and a
heart that is open, willing to find a personal truth and say
it.
Philip F. Deaver, How Men Pray
Diana M. Raab's Dear Anais: My Life in Poems for You is not only a
tribute to the late diarist, but also a tribute to diaries
themselves. Each of the book's poems, culled from Raab's own
journal, offers intimate portraitures, tiny memoirs in verse.
Raab's poetry is seductive in its earnestness, appealing in its
vulnerability, mystery, and enchantment.
Denise Duhamel, poet, author of Two and Two and Queen for a Day:
Selected and New Poems
Raab's skill is as a poet, but her passages are as intimate as a
diary. She reconstructs her past mirroring Nin's emotional honesty.
The reader never feels voyeuristic reading the intimate passages,
but feels like a confidant, friend and maybe even a lover.
Steve Reigns, Nin scholar, poet, and editor of My Life is Poetry
In Diana Raab's "imaginary world.people drip with stories / and
linger in bookstores and cafes / slurping foamy cappuccinos / and
nibbling chocolate cake." And the poems in Dear Anais are, indeed,
rife with both stories and the extravagantly various things of this
world: Laundromats and writers' conferences, steel-tipped boots and
champagne, patched jeans and paramedics, blueberries and
autographed photos of Paul Newman. While the book does pay homage
to Anais Nin-to her eroticism and wry humor and exquisite
journals-it also vividly evoke's Raab's own life, particularly her
family memories. Like Nin, Raab is indefatigable in her desire to
commit one woman's life to paper.
David Starkey, author of Ways of Being Dead
Praise for Diana Raab's memoir Regina's Closet:
" Raab makes Regina's Closet a walk-in book, complete with
recovered documents and packed with the sumptuous, minute,
domestic, tormented and romantic details of one fully-lived life
and another plucky life lived in answer to it."
Molly Peacock, poet, author of Cornucopia: New & Selected
Poems
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|