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Dalee

Dalee

"I would be most content if my children grow up to be the kind of people who think decorating consists mostly of building enough bookshelves."
~ Anna Quindlen

"All men dream, but not equally. Those who dream at night, in the dusty recess of their mind, wake in... more »
  • Kalamazoo, MI
  • member since August 3 2007

Reviews

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Displaying 1-10 of 14 reviews
  • Eat, Pray, Love
    • Rated 4 stars

    personally not only enjoyed this book but found myself inspired by it.

    I have to say that I don't think it's fair to judge the book based on the authors personal spiritual practices. It says right in the title that this is about one woman's search, it's not meant to be a religious studies manual or even a how-to find you own spiritual enlightenment guide.

    I was not bothered at all that she had "no problem meditating on herself despite being in a country where some of the most oppressed women in the world live a life of abject suffering every day." She was in said countries not as a good will ambassador but because she was on an internal journey which is by its very nature a self focused time in a persons life.

    I am a person who has that 'I must save the world' mentality and one of the hardest lessons for me is one that my mother has been repeating to me for many years now and that's that you have to take care of yourself and your immediate family before you can take care of the entire world. I feel that during the writing of this book, the author was in a place of nurturing her own spirit and in essence saving herself. If that seams selfish, well then I pity those who can't see through their own glass house to see how very necessary this type of journey is to every person.

    Dalee wrote this review Sunday, August 3 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Animal Farm
    • Rated 0 stars

    I read this as a kid and it scared me so bad that I have never attempted to read it again with my 'adult' eyes. It's funny how strong a childhood fear can cling to your logic through adulthood.

    Dalee wrote this review Wednesday, September 12 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • Forever Amber (Signet Double)
    • Rated 0 stars

    While this isn’t risqué by today’s standards, my Grandmother got into trouble for reading it at school in her day. So it’s become kind of a family tradition to read this, for that reason alone it’s become a family favorite. In fact my mother came close to naming me Amber after it.

    It stands on it own merit though and it’s a good read, even if you don’t have scandalous family stories behind it.

    Dalee wrote this review Friday, August 24 2007. ( reply | permalink )
    • Rated 0 stars

    One of my favorite teen reads from when I was a teen.

    Here is the 'Card catalog description' from Amazon.....

    A sixteen-year-old living in a group home in San Francisco examines her relationship with the two most important men in her life, one, her mother's pimp, the other, an elderly Chinese gentleman lying ill in a hospital.

    Dalee wrote this review Tuesday, September 11 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • Water for Elephants
    • Rated 0 stars

    Because almost everyone has a fantasy of running away and joining the gypsy’s or the circus or just disappearing in some way from our everyday lives, this book should appeal to the Huck Finn inside us all. You will laugh and cry, mourn and rejoice. You will be both fascinated and appalled. But what you will not be is bored or feel as though you have wasted your time. This book feels like a grand adventure and an old friend all at once.

    Dalee wrote this review Friday, August 24 2007. ( reply | permalink )
    • Rated 0 stars

    This wasn’t a reread over and over kind of book for me…but that’s not to say that I didn’t enjoy it. It plants a seed in your mind and really stuck an interest in me to start thinking and looking at the how’s and why’s our society came to be so absurdly patriarchal when the matriarchal aspects are just as important when you look at the grand scheme. I tend to think what we really need is balance rather than one over the other.

    Dalee wrote this review Friday, August 24 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • My Secret: A PostSecret Book
    • Rated 0 stars

    PostSecret is my not-so-secret indulgence.

    Dalee wrote this review Friday, August 24 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • Ghost Boy

    Ghost Boy

    by Iain Lawrence
    • Rated 0 stars

    Okay, so I'm cheating here by not posting my personal review. But his reader/poster on Amazon reviews it perfectly.

    * Reviewed by an Amazon user, June 7, 2006

    No two people are exactly alike; it is our differences that set us apart and make us unique. This is precisely the topic that author Iain Lawrence addresses in Ghost Boy. Through his use of visual imagery and foreshadowing, Lawrence is able to create an adventuresome tale of a boy who grows up to understand more about the world in which he lives.
    Since the story is easy to read, it is the passages of lush imagery that keep the interest of the advanced. The entire story is based around Harold, a teenage albino boy who has no friends. He lives in a small town where his unusual looks are target for the other kids to bully him. His "skin like rich white chocolate" and his "eyes [of] such a pale blue that they [are] almost clear, like raindrops" make Harold extremely self-conscious about himself (1). However, through his growth and development, Harold comes to accept himself, despite his unusual appearance. Lawrence poses the question of who is to decide what makes someone normal in the first place?
    Adding to the suspense that moves the story along is foreshadowing. When Harold decides to run away and join the circus, he meets the Gypsy Magda. She reads his tea-leaves one night and predicts three major events to happen in the near future. She mentions a young child that will be on death's door, yet will be saved, she talks about a great danger, and she claims that a devastating tragedy will occur. Around the middle of the book the first two predictions come true. The reader is then left wondering if any of various small occurrences could be the big tragedy that is predicted. However, it is not until the end that the reader realizes exactly what the tragedy is.
    Although Ghost Boy is suitable for young adult readers, it is the more mature readers who will be able to pick up on the hidden meanings and lessons in the text. Lawrence encourages one to be more accepting of those who are different, while also writing a story to be remembered.

    Dalee wrote this review Tuesday, August 21 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • Zack
    • Rated 4 stars

    This is a beautiful story of a biracial boy trying to discover himself by tracing his roots, both his racial roots and those of his close family. What he finds are layers of beauty and ugliness, love and hate, joy and sorrow. And finally acceptance of all of those characteristics within each of us.

    Dalee wrote this review Wednesday, August 15 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • Ask Me If I Care

    Ask Me If I Care

    by H.B. Gilmour
    • Rated 0 stars

    One of my favorites as a teen.

    Dalee wrote this review Wednesday, August 15 2007. ( reply | permalink )
Displaying 1-10 of 14 reviews

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