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This Planner was designed to transform your week. Get organized and
make a plan that you can execute so you can succeed. The weekly
layout allows you to set your goals and keep them in front of you
for the week. You'll also be able to customize your schedule and
lists that best fit your needs. There is also a meal planning
section so you can plan a healthy week of food and save some money.
This Planner will help you get organized by making a plan which
will lead you to success.
BBC Radio 4 Book of the Week'Wonderfully idiosyncratic, coolly
heartfelt and memorable' William Boyd'One of the great writers of
early 20th Century Russia' Simon Sebag Montefiore'A remarkable
memoir . . . both potent and endearing' Erica Wagner, New Statesman
The writer and satirist Teffi was a literary sensation in Russia
until war and revolution forced her to leave her country for ever.
Memories is a blackly funny and heartbreaking account of her final,
frantic journey into exile across Russia - travelling by cart,
freight train and rickety steamer - and the 'ordinary and unheroic'
people she encounters. Fusing exuberant wit and bitter horror, this
is an extraordinary portrayal of what it means to say goodbye, and
confirms Teffi as one of the most humane, perceptive observers of
her times, and an essential writer for ours.
Teffi's genius with the short form made her a literary star in
pre-revolutionary Russia, beloved by Tsar Nicholas II and Vladimir
Lenin alike. These stories, taken from the whole of her career,
show the full range of her gifts. Extremely funny - a wry, scathing
observer of society - she is also capable, as capable even as
Chekhov, of miraculous subtlety and depth of character. There are
stories here from her own life (as a child, going to meet Tolstoy
to plead for the life of War and Peace's Prince Bolkonsky, or, much
later, her strange, charged meetings with the already-legendary
Rasputin). There are stories of emigre society, its members held
together by mutual repulsion. There are stories of people
misunderstanding each other or misrepresenting themselves. And
throughout there is a sly, sardonic wit and a deep, compelling
intelligence.
In the midst of a marital crisis, Jane hatches an unusual plan to
avoid a custody battle, the thing she most fears: she convinces
husband Kevin to walk away from the pressures of New York—in
particular, her demanding job and an affair she almost had—in the
hope that moving to their favorite city abroad will fix their
family. In San Miguel de Allende, Jane and her young sons delight
in new adventures, but Kevin still seethes. Jane befriends a circle
of intriguing women and helps two girls who remind her of the
brother she abandoned when her own parents divorced. After
witnessing violence involving the girls’ father, Jane’s vivid
dreams, possibly guided by a hummingbird messenger from the
hereafter, grow ever darker. When tragedy strikes San Miguel, the
community fractures and then rises, and Jane must make a dangerous
choice. The Broken Hummingbird balances the raw undoing of a
marriage with the joys of discovery that lie in building a new
life.
How do great moments in literary traditions arise from times of
intense social and political upheaval? South African Literature's
Russian Soul charts the interplay of narrative innovation and
political isolation in two of the world's most renowned
non-European literatures. In this book, Jeanne-Marie Jackson
demonstrates how Russian writing's "Golden Age" in the troubled
nineteenth-century has served as a model for South African writers
both during and after apartheid. Exploring these two isolated
literary cultures alongside each other, the book challenges the
limits of "global" methodologies in contemporary literary studies
and outdated models of center-periphery relations to argue for a
more locally involved scale of literary enquiry with more truly
global horizons.
An ambitious look at the African novel and its connections to
African philosophy in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries The
African Novel of Ideas focuses on the role of the philosophical
novel and the place of philosophy more broadly in the intellectual
life of the African continent, from the early twentieth century to
today. Examining works from the Gold Coast, South Africa, Uganda,
and Zimbabwe, and tracing how such writers as J. E. Casely Hayford,
Imraan Coovadia, Tendai Huchu, Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi, and
Stanlake Samkange reconcile deep contemplation with their social
situations, Jeanne-Marie Jackson offers a new way of reading and
understanding African literature. Jackson begins with Fante
anticolonial worldliness in prenationalist Ghana, moves through
efforts to systematize Shona philosophy in 1970s Zimbabwe, looks at
the Ugandan novel Kintu as a treatise on pluralistic rationality,
and arrives at the treatment of "philosophical suicide" by current
southern African writers. As Jackson charts philosophy's evolution
from a dominant to marginal presence in African literary discourse
across the past hundred years, she assesses the push and pull of
subjective experience and abstract thought. The first major
transnational exploration of African literature in conversation
with philosophy, The African Novel of Ideas redefines the place of
the African experience within literary history.
An ambitious look at the African novel and its connections to
African philosophy in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries The
African Novel of Ideas focuses on the role of the philosophical
novel and the place of philosophy more broadly in the intellectual
life of the African continent, from the early twentieth century to
today. Examining works from the Gold Coast, South Africa, Uganda,
and Zimbabwe, and tracing how such writers as J. E. Casely Hayford,
Imraan Coovadia, Tendai Huchu, Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi, and
Stanlake Samkange reconcile deep contemplation with their social
situations, Jeanne-Marie Jackson offers a new way of reading and
understanding African literature. Jackson begins with Fante
anticolonial worldliness in prenationalist Ghana, moves through
efforts to systematize Shona philosophy in 1970s Zimbabwe, looks at
the Ugandan novel Kintu as a treatise on pluralistic rationality,
and arrives at the treatment of "philosophical suicide" by current
southern African writers. As Jackson charts philosophy's evolution
from a dominant to marginal presence in African literary discourse
across the past hundred years, she assesses the push and pull of
subjective experience and abstract thought. The first major
transnational exploration of African literature in conversation
with philosophy, The African Novel of Ideas redefines the place of
the African experience within literary history.
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