Book Description
In Home Before Dark, Susan Cheever, daughter of the famously talented writer John Cheever, uses previously unpublished letters, journals, and her own precious memories to create a candid and insightful tribute to her father. While producing some of the most beloved and celebrated American literature of this century, John Cheever wrestled with personal demons that deeply affected his family life as well as his career. In this poignant memoir of a man driven by boundless genius and ambition, Susan Cheever writes with heartwrenching honesty of family life with the father, the writer, and the remarkable man she loved.
Download Description
One of America's most celebrated twentieth-century writers, John Cheever struggled with personal demons that deeply affected his family life as well as his career. Beginning with her own memories, and then drawing on many previously unpublished letters and journals, Susan Cheever has produced an eloquent, intimate portrait that confronts his legacy both as a writer and as a father. John Updike wrote, "Whatever biographers and literary historians of the future make of John Cheever, their ur-text, their indispensable place of beginning will have to be Susan Cheever's beautiful book about her father."
Customer Reviews:
Confusion in creation- land .......2007-03-11
This memoir tells a great deal about the extended family of John Cheever. His is the less reputable wing of of a family which goes back to the early foundations of America. Susan Cheever writes with understanding and consideration of her father's troubled life. The shocking bankruptcy and abandonment of his father remained a basis for his great insecurity throughout his life. Susan Cheever reveals her father to be a man of great charm, and excellent ability to befriend and be helped by wealthy patrons, including those at Yaddo the Saratoga writing colony which for him was a second home. Susan Cheever also describes somewhat fitfully the mixed- up - marriage Cheever never let go of, one in which there seemed to have been infidelity on both sides- and which seemed to go downhill in the later years.
Susan Cheever writes with descriptive elegance about her father 's life. She does not however explain or even hint at the great mystery of how he managed to create his best work. And she does not really tell us what the work consists in, or how it best expressed what her father was.
I also felt the work lacking in another way. It does not really get inside Cheever and reveal to us the world the way he might have seen it. Nor does it trace the effect of his celebrity and alcoholism , of his wit and capacity for friendship on his children. Susan Cheever is silent about her father's effect upon her.
I found that is with all the basic admiration and sympathy that she expresses for her father, a certain coldness in the work- a coldness which was perhaps her father's also.
But again perhaps I found Cheever's story much less 'moving 'than I might have because I too am not a great fan of his stories.
Susan is a better writer than John.......2007-03-02
This is a very interesting look at the demons of the father, from alcoholism to a confused sexuality that wreaked havoc on his family. John Cheever forged a career writing about his own issues, tales of disillusion and disintegration in suburbia, all to alcoholic excess and in search of meaning. Susan, his daughter, is an absolutely excellent writer and explains what he was like as she grew up, so it is not a straight biography but mixed with memoire. Some of it is shocking, such as the way John periodically left to be with men, only to come back to a wife he clearly loved enduringly. But there is also a lot of redemption, of striving to be better though the pain is ever present. Oddly, I have never liked his writing much, finding his personal problems more of a spectacle and indeed more absorbing to learn about. Susan, I think, is the true writing talent in the family - her style is clear and unflinchingly honest, almost exhibitionistic. Few expose themselves so evenhandedly. Indeed, her moments are unforgettably vivid: such as her sitting in the lap of a drunken guest writer, in a tweed jacket reeking of cigarette smoke, saying to herself that she would marry that kind of man; or watching her father, after a few hours of writing and overcoming a hangover, pruning his lawn with ritual energy.
Truly a beautiful, often tormented, book. Warmly recommended.
A Terrific Book.......2003-12-07
Home Before Dark is a beautifully written, moving book that stays with you long after you have finished reading it. It helps that Susan Cheever's subject, her father, was (and remains long after his death) one of the finest fiction writers in the history of American literature. What distinguishes John Cheever's stories, outside of his magical touch with words, is the passion and love he brings to illuminating his small corner of the world -- life in the New York suburbs of the 1950s and 1960s. Most writers who explore the suburbs do so with an arm's length superiority -- taking pains to distance themselves politically, emotionally, and intellectually from their characters. What makes Cheever's stories such a joy it that he loves the world he writes about -- even as he recognizes its banalities and limitations. In Cheever's hand, the commuter life becomes a sad, beautiful symphony of lost hopes and desires. The 5:45 train, the clinking of cocktail glasses, the smell of meat cooking on an outdoor grill are not just dull routines of modern life, but thrilling and exotic elements of that peculiarly American optimism and quest for success that flowered after World War II -- all the more alluring because the quest is so often doomed.
In the same way, Susan Cheever brings passion and honesty to the telling of her father's life. In her hands, John Cheever's own outwardly unremarkable search for the suburban dream life of wife, kids, dog and station wagon in Ossining, New York becomes a dark romantic quest of longing, passion, success and disappointment. She is thoroughly honest (sometimes brutally so) in detailing Cheever's alcoholism, philandering, phobias and parental shortcomings -- so it is all the more remarkable that the final portrait of Cheever that emerges is so rich and full of love.
This book is the perfect companion piece for Cheever's indispensible Collected Stories (with that famous red cover). Think of Home Before Dark as a sort of lexicon to John Cheever's world. I keep both books on a special bookshelf -- easily accessible -- containing the books I come back to again and again, like old friends.
Cheever Still An Enigma.......2000-06-11
As a memoir of a daughter's relationship with her father, this is very touching, but there is little here that sheds much light on John Cheever, the writer. Given the various levels of family dysfunction and unhappiness in Cheever's stories and novels, it is gratifying that his daughter found so much to love in her father. For a more abrasive, but still admiring view of the man, you might also enjoy reading Benjamin Cheever's novel, The Plagiarist.
More John Cheever please; less Susan Cheever.......2000-02-03
This would have been a better book if Susan Cheever had more to write about. For example, she could have delved more into the business of his writing, how much money he made, or his friendships with other writers. A little bit of research wouldn't have hurt. This is a very slight book. Also, I could care to know less about Susan Cheever; i.e. how she had been the source of some of John's stories....
Average customer rating:
- A four tissue book
- Boring and One-Dimensional
- A touching story of family relationships
- Another Pleasing Story with Memorable Characters....
- Engrossing family drama
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Home Before Dark
Susan Wiggs
Manufacturer: Mira
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Mass Market Paperback
Contemporary | General | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
Wiggs, Susan | ( W ) | Authors, A-Z | Romance | Subjects | Books
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( W ) | Authors, A-Z | Romance | 4-for-3 Books Store | Stores | Books
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ASIN: 0778320197 |
Book Description
With a wise, insightful voice, acclaimed author Susan Wiggs creates a moving novel about family, second chances and the healing power of love.
Photojournalist Jessie Ryder has never been able to travel far enough to escape the pain of giving her baby daughter away. Now, sixteen years later, she's decided to come home to seek out Lila, even if it means upsetting the world of Lila's adoptive mother . . . her very own sister, Luz. As Jessie and Luz examine the true meaning of love, loyalty and family, they are drawn into an emotional tug-of-war filled with moments of unexpected humor, surprising sweetness and unbearable sadness. And as the pain, regrets and mistakes of the past slowly rise to the surface, a new picture emerges -- a picture filled with hope and promise and the redeeming power of the human heart.
Customer Reviews:
A four tissue book.......2007-09-23
This book was great. You can tell that Debbie did her research on blindness. Had to stay up past by bedtime in order to finish it and did use several tissues before I was done. I would have changed the ending a little....no pregnancy....since she had so much to handle as it was. It left me feeling a little sorry for her.
Boring and One-Dimensional.......2007-02-26
Perhaps I just don't like this author's style. I found the book very boring from the get-go although I forced myself to read the entire thing so that I could make a fair observation. I was uninterested in the characters and felt that the story jumped around and around. Not my cup of tea.
A touching story of family relationships.......2006-12-29
I have very much enjoyed the two previous books I had read by Susan Wiggs - they were Historical Romances - but when this book arrived from inter-library loan and I read the blurb on the back it seemed I'd picked the wrong sort of book for me. The story was evidently about family relationships and tensions following a woman adopting her sister's child at birth. I put off reading the book for a while but when I finally started it I was immediately engrossed.
Jessie Ryder is a successful photographer but with secrets. The first secret is that Lila, her niece, is actually her daughter. Her sister Luz and her husband Ian took Lila the moment she was born and have brought her up as their own child along with three sons that came along later. But there are more secrets that Luz doesn't know - Jess and Ian had a brief fling before he got together with Luz and Ian is the father of Lila - both adoptive and natural. But there are even more secrets; Jessie is visiting them now, after sixteen years, as she is losing her sight and wants to take a final `look' at her family, particularly her daughter, before it all goes dark.
Jessie is an interesting character and I wasn't always sure I liked her. She deals with emotions by running away and never seems to stick with anything. She comes like a whirlwind into Luz and Ian's life and appears to be causing disruption - teenager Lila is becoming wayward and ends up involved in a tragedy, and even the grieving widower next door gets sucked in to Jessie's mayhem. And yet she's also a woman who feels greatly for the mistakes that she has made in her life and who wants her family to be happy and does what she can to further that.
Despite me not really being interesting in family relationship books this one was very good - I wanted things to turn out well, for Jess and her sister to go back to the close relationship that they formerly had, for Jess to have the support she would need in her future. This book portrayed the complex family dynamics that can take place in what seem to be ordinary lives and the ways in which those we love can hurt us as well as heal us. There's a gentle and sweet romance in the book too, as well as a fascinating vignette into what it must be like to go blind as an adult. I recommend this book as an enjoyable and excellently-written read.
Another Pleasing Story with Memorable Characters...........2006-06-07
I found Susan Wiggs and her books late last year. Since then, I have read about ½ a dozen so far. Each one has been charming, interesting and unique. She is a very talented author and her characters and story lines always come alive for me each time I open a book and begin a new journey through her eyes, thoughts and hands. My favorites so far in order are The Horsemaster's Daughter (h), A Summer Affair (h), Halfway to Heaven (h), The Firebrand (h), Enchanted Afternoon (h), An Ocean Between Us (c) and then Miranda (h). She mixes historical romances (h) and contemporary (c) plot lines. My favorites so far have been historical in context.
In this latest book I selected, Home Before Dark (c) , I felt similar enjoyment of reading a new story line and discovering the wonder of new characters, new setting and new developments. Although I found the story line interesting - wild sister comes home after years away - running from her past of course - to enter the lives of her family again. She returns due to a personal trauma that is happening to her to find forgiveness and acceptance. The family has to deal with her past mistakes, her current situation and planning for the future. She creates chaos for everyone - her standard role in the family. But...for once, she can't run from the past. She must meet it head on as time for once is against her.
I had trouble connecting with the lead heroine Jessie and her eventual beau Dusty. She reminded me of so many girls I know who are pretty, spirited, have all the guys after them and spend their lives on the go - never being serious or dealing with reality - because they can't deal with it and often don't have to. So...they travel the world and hide behind their looks or talent as inside they are fragile and easily crushed. Jessie had it all to the outside world but, inside she was struggling to find herself and her place in life. Although I appreciated her struggle and journey, I simply never felt emotionally tied to her as the main character, even with her progressing blindness and disease. Instead...I kept seeing how selfish she was from the time she was a teenager, through her 20's and 30's and so on. I was irritated with how much she took from people and often how little she gave in return. This made it hard for me to connect with her, feel sympathy for her situation, etc. I warmed up to her more by the end but, she still had a lot of making up to do than the book would allow. I liked Dusty - her future man but, he came in and out in sections and scenes and I could have used more of him to really feel for him as a leading man. Much of what we learned about him came through telling his story to a magazine to publish - it was a little clinical for me. He was a good hero - just not there enough.
I enjoyed reading more about Jessie's sister Luz as she was stable, reliable and trust worthy, the rock of the family - both in the younger years and in the middle years. Luz could be depended on as a daughter, sister, wife, mother and co-worker. She was not perfect - in looks, brains or skills but, she had a heart of gold and gave everything her all. She took and gave back - much more balanced. I even liked her husband Ian...he was her perfect compliment. He was handsome, intelligent, solid and kind. Not exciting but, someone you could have fun with, change with the seasons and grow old with great comfort. That has its own appeal.
There was so much going on in this story - kids getting in a car crash, a death, disclosure of who Lila's real mother and father were, relationship issues with Jessie & Dusty and Luz and Ian, the activity of kids and parents and careers in photography, etc. that the story line almost got away from itself at times. Not because it wasn't told well but, simply because there was too much going on. 2-3 stories lines might have been enough - that was power packed by itself. But...to have ½ a dozen big events going on in one book put it a little over the top. I would have felt more emotion for all the characters had I more time to spend on each one of them. Instead, each section and chapter went from one event and person to another and then more changes and developments happened - a bit of a whirlwind if you ask me.
I did find a few parts a little unrealistic - 1) Lila getting the news she was adopted and who was her real mother and father - she took that news a bit lightly for a girl who seemed to be having growing pains already and simply took this huge issue in stride 2) that Luz would have no jealousy over knowing her husband and sister had been lovers - what sister would not find this an issue? 3) that no one in the family ever truly told Jessie off and called her to task on her constant selfishness - having affairs, having a baby out of wedlock and then running out on the child in ICU and leaving it to her sister to raise, never being around other than a few calls or letters over the years, loving and leaving people when it was inconvenient for her (Ian, Simon, Dusty, etc.). 4) that Jessie, Glenny or Lila never really thanked Luz for all she had done over the years - she bore the families burdens often single handedly - she deserved more thanks than she got from everyone. Luz wasn't a martyr - she simply did the right thing when others did not. As the old saying goes - Good people do things right....Great people do the right thing. Although many of these important issues were addressed, it seemed on the surface and nothing truly deep as a real family would have to deal with over time. That was the only thing I found lacking at times.
Although this is the least favorite of my books by this author so far, it is still a gem. I don't think SW can write a bad book. When you are as good at story telling as this author is, even her least appealing works rank above other authors best attempts. I would recommend this book and the other ones even more. Give her a try if you haven't yet. You'll be glad you did. She is great at tapping into human emotions and the complexity of relationships - man/woman, adult/child, female to female and more. Happy reading!
Engrossing family drama.......2005-06-06
I loved this book. I particularly loved the relationship between the sisters, which I found completely realistic and exceptionally touching. Although they had their differences and were envious of each other's lives and choices, their love for each other shone through.
Ms. Wiggs is a wonderful writer. I don't agree with the Publisher's Weekly reviewer who said she tends to overwrite. The thing some reviewers don't get is that descriptions of emotions are to a romance what descriptions of gore and mayhem are to a thriller.
The only thing I'd have done differently had I written this book (and I sure wish I had!) would be not to tell Lila the truth. Ian needed to know, yes, but I don't think any higher purpose was served by telling Lila.
But that's a minor point in an otherwise totally engaging, intense story that gave my box of Kleenex a workout! HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.
Average customer rating:
- Effective Caring
- Practical, Heartwarming Help for Families and Caregivers of Alzheimer's Patients
- Tools for Alzheimer's Caregivers
- A MUST read for everyone, with or without Alzheimer patients
- Please Take Me Home Before Dark
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Please Take Me Home Before Dark: One Family's Journey With Alzheimer's Disease
Billie J. Pate , and
Mary Pate Yarnell
Manufacturer: Hillsboro Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Eldercare | Aging Parents | Parenting & Families | Subjects | Books
Family Health | Parenting & Families | Subjects | Books
General | Parenting & Families | Subjects | Books
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Nervous System | Disorders & Diseases | Health, Mind & Body | Subjects | Books
Alzheimer's Disease | Disorders & Diseases | Health, Mind & Body | Subjects | Books
ASIN: 1577363892 |
Book Description
Please Take Me Home Before Dark provides inspiration, information, and support to family members and caring professionals of Alzheimer's patients (and other forms of dementia). Using a writing style that is warm, yet instructive; serious, though sometimes humorous; and highly personal, yet medically reliable, the authors share their mother's progression through Alzheimer's to benefit others facing the same situation. Although intensely personal, the book also magnifies meanings and provides practical help. Each chapter includes a sensitive, poetic introduction; an empathetic and informative description of the Alzheimer's process; poignant personal illustrations; and at-a-glance sections to help readers map the patient's journey and provide loving care with hope and confidence.
Customer Reviews:
Effective Caring.......2007-03-08
Two sisters, lovingly and effectively caring for their mother, have provided a vast storehouse of guidelines in 82 pages. From the resources to the "Caregiving Caplets" the changes they saw in their mother are invaluable for others with Alzheimer's. This is a hour by hour account, full of honesty, searching, and committment... a major contribution to the field.
Practical, Heartwarming Help for Families and Caregivers of Alzheimer's Patients.......2007-02-05
"What do I do now?" is often the painful question posed by families and caregivers faced with the evidence of a decline in the mental, emotional and physcial capacity of a loved one. The deeply inspiring telling of the story of this family will help others find ways to answer that question. It is beautifully written with a sensitive understanding of a mother slowing losing herself to a dreaded disease. The Caregiving Caplets provide easily understood suggestions for coping with the disease while attempting to maintain the dignity of the loved one. I highly recommend this practical and heartwarming book!
Tools for Alzheimer's Caregivers.......2007-02-01
Three tools in the book prepare Alzheimer's caregivers for their own difficult journey. (1) The poetry demonstrates a prepared family's plan to adapt to specific patient changes. (2) The comprehensive lists of expected patient changes and (3) the matching lists of needed caregiver adaptations guide families in developing their own response plan. I have been close to three families while they made the long Alzheimer's journey. I recall how they were surprised when they encountered the patient changes described in this book. I also recall their frustrations in dealing with those changes. Knowing beforehand what to expect prepares caregivers to plan their own responses rather than reacting out of raw feelings. I bought a copy to give to a family beginning the journey.
A MUST read for everyone, with or without Alzheimer patients.......2007-01-22
Many folks don't have an understanding of how to preserve the dignity of their loved one in this condition. The many suggestions in this book provide that understanding. The poetry in each chapter makes such a sensitive, caring response to the Alzheimer's patient. The book is full of depth, insight, and understanding - said in simple and practical ways!
Please Take Me Home Before Dark.......2007-01-22
An outstanding true story of a loving family whose mother suffered with
Alzheimer's disease. Daughters tell of many difficult situations as well as tender moments they shared with their mother. Caregiving Caplets give practical hints that will help others as they relate to someone with this disease. I immediately ordered five copies to share with family members and friends who are coping with victims of Alzheimer's. MLH
Average customer rating:
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Home Before Dark
Susan Cheever
Manufacturer: Tauris Parke Paperbacks
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General | Biographies & Memoirs | Subjects | Books
20th Century | British | World Literature | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
ASIN: 1860646808 |
Book Description
God calls us to live lives of holiness. But that is impossible without a close walk with Christ. That walk must begin with repentance; it is crucial to living biblical, practical holiness everyday. Crawford Loritts takes a fresh look at the role of repentance in Make It Home Before Dark. Written with warmth and insight, Loritts gives help to those struggling with sin or rejection in their lives. This is an honest and hopeful book, full of biblical insight and practical advice. It may be just the tool to help you in your journey to a fuller life in Christ.
Customer Reviews:
Back.......2000-10-19
When reading this book, the reader should start with the last chapter, then return to the first. In that last chapter, Dr. Lorritts sets forth the theme of the whole book: "I believe that the church needs to be called back to the high ground of holiness." Dr. Lorritts makes a powerful and cogent argument that the process of change in the life of a Christian, the process of sanctification or becoming like Christ, is a process of continual repentance. In the book Dr. Lorritts addresses:
The need for Christian believers to comprehend sin in their own lives through God's eyes, using Scripture as the standard of human conduct, as opposed to a societally imposed standard;
The effects of sin in the lives of believers, in terms of both eternal and temporal consequences;
An understanding of repentance as both a point and a process, turning from sin and making a way back `home' to God's path;
The need to have an appropriate fear of God, as the Lord of the Universe, and an understanding of what that ought to mean in daily life;
The need for the church, as the Body of Christ, to be a vehicle to help believers to come to grips with their sin and work through the process of repentance, as opposed to mitigating the sinnner's understanding of the stain that sin is on their lives.
This is a fine book, well worth reading and re-reading.
Average customer rating:
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Home Before Dark
Ian Beck
Manufacturer: Scholastic
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Picture Books | Baby-3 | Children's Books | Subjects | Books
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ASIN: 0439175224 |
Book Description
When Teddy¹s owner, Lily, accidentally drops him from her carriage, he is determined to make it back to her before bedtime. But that¹s not so easy for a little bear. Like the warmth of a goodnight hug, Home Before Dark is perfect for sharing with a loved one before bedtime.
Average customer rating:
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Home Before Dark
Beverly Hastings
Manufacturer: Berkley
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Mysteries, Espionage, & Detectives | Science Fiction, Fantasy, Mystery & Horror | Literature | Children's Books | Subjects | Books
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Customer Reviews:
excellent book.......2002-01-28
i loved this book! could have been a movie, the characters are well developed, and the suspence is excellent. I wish beverly would write a sequel. definately the best book ever by this athour.
Average customer rating:
- A gifted writer
- Home Before Dark
- Heart Warming Story
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Home Before Dark
Sue Ellen Bridgers
Manufacturer: Knopf Books for Young Readers
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Teens | Subjects | Books | Authors, A-Z | Biographies & Memoirs | Health, Mind & Body | History & Historical Fiction | Horror | Literature & Fiction | Manga | Mysteries | Reference | Religion & Spirituality | School & Sports | Science & Technology | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Series | Social Issues
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ASIN: 039483299X
Release Date: 1976-08-12 |
Book Description
A coming-of-age novel named the "New York Times" Outstanding Book of the Year and American Library Assn. "Best Book for Young Adults," this is about Stella Willis, who has spent most of her 14 years living out of a station wagon as her family moves from one picking station to another. When her father takes them to his family's tobacco farm, she swears she'll never leave...but finds that clinging to new roots isn't enough as she reaches out to find a place of her own.
Customer Reviews:
A gifted writer.......2003-05-17
I first discovered this author over 10 years ago in graduate course in Appalachian children's literature. Ms. Bridgers is wonderful. This book captures so many emotions and evokes such realistic images. She truly writes of her region and deserves more praise than she recieves. In fact, I was so engrossed in this work, I wrote my master's thesis on her novels.
This book combines the images of the strong southern family, family secrets, and the tragedies of poverty in a wonderful way
Home Before Dark.......2001-07-26
In Home Before Dark, by Sue Ellen Bridgers, the main character Stella, is a fourteen-year-old, is looking for some roots to hold onto. Stella's family has been living out of their battered station wagon. Her family has a very difficult life; they are migrant workers. Stella's father, James Earl, decides to go to his childhood home. Stella and her father are very happy about this, but her mother, Mae, isn't. When they get to the family farm, James Earl tells everyone to stay in the car because his brother, Newton, does not know that James Earl is coming to visit, let alone live with him for a while. Finally Stella has a place she can call home, somewhere she can explore all the exciting things going on in her life, like boys and friends. Stella's excitement turns to confusion when she finds herself between two very different boys, Toby, the farmhand, and Rodney, the awkward rich boy. Meanwhile Stella's mother dies, and Stella takes this hard. After a while, James Earl decides to get married again. Stella does not want to move again, after finally getting some roots established. I thought that this book was great. I really do not like to read that much, but this book really kept my attention This book was very well written and had a great plot. I thought that the story did not seem like much like a real story. I can almost picture Stella going through this time in her life. While I was reading the book, I felt that Stella was my friend, and we were going through this time together. I think that I will read more of Sue Ellen Bridgers's books in the future.
Heart Warming Story.......2001-04-09
This novel is a heart warming tale about the importance of putting down roots and finding acceptance. Stella has lived the difficult life of a migrant worker but when her family returns to her father's boyhood home, she is anxious to start living a "normal" life. She weathers the anguish of losing her mother through the support of her newly extended family and the friends she has made in her new home town. When her father decides to remarry, she is upset. She does not want to leave the first real home she has had to move into the new house her stepmother is providing. Although it takes Stella some time, she eventually realizes that the most important roots of all do not belong to places but to the people who love you. This book was very well written and highly entertaining.
Average customer rating:
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Getting Home Before Dark: Stories of Wisdom for All Ages
Peter J. Dyck
Manufacturer: Thorndike Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
General | Religion & Spirituality | Subjects | Books
Inspirational | Spirituality | Religion & Spirituality | Subjects | Books
Devotionals | Spirituality | Religion & Spirituality | Subjects | Books
Devotionals | Worship & Devotion | Christianity | Religion & Spirituality | Subjects | Books
Literature & Fiction | Large Print | Formats | Books
Religion & Spirituality | Large Print | Formats | Books
ASIN: 0786249692 |
Book Description
After many years with Mennonite Central Committee, Peter J. Dyck shares stories and insights from his broad experience.
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