In A Sunburned Country, A Walk in the Woods and I'm a Stranger Here Myself: Notes on Returning to America After 20 Years Away da link
While I have only discovered Bill Bryson's works within the past year, I have whole-heartedly fallen in Amore with his writings. Why? Because they are the freaking funniest things I have ever read. He delights in depicting the strange and the awkward, which usually turns out to be him. This "God Dad! [teenage eyes rolling in disdain, can't believing that they are related]" theme runs throughout his books, adding *pop* and *crackle* to his extremely informative self-travel journeys. A Walk in the Woods is about his hike along the US Appalachian Trail; In A Sunburned Country is about Bryson's travels across Australia; I'm a Stranger Here Myself: Notes on Returning to America After 20 Years Away is (as the titolo so prominently points out) about returning to the American lifestyle after twenty years of living in England. "Woods" and "Sunburned" are full-fledged libri about his trips; "Stranger" is a collection of columns that he wrote for British Sunday newspaper readers, gathered up so non-British audiences could enjoy them too. It probably is my preferito of the three although it might be because it was the first one of his writings that I read. And as we all know, one never forgets their first love.
Under the Tuscan Sun da Frances Mayes
It is strangely hard for me to write about this book because I am too close to it -- I read it whenever I feel homesick, wintersick, any kind of sick. Her words paint an enchanting picture of Cortona, Italy where she and her partner buy and restore a secondo house, and are slowly absorbed into the daily Italian life. Every giorno reveals a new discovery for Mayes, whether it be a local Etruscan artifact (the Etruscans preceded the Romans) o that every oliva oil has a distinctive taste. Though her life is not always perfect, it it always painted with the most colorful descriptions. Leggere Under the Tuscan Sun makes me want to follow in her footsteps. I feel an extra connection dato that I have spent several summers in Italy and she mentions my two hometowns, San Francisco and Palo Alto, CA. da FAR better than the movie but if te pick up a more-recent edition of Under the Tuscan Sun, Mayes offers an interesting perspective on the movie-making experience. Perfecto!
Walking My Dog, Jane: From Valdez to Prudhoe baia Along the Trans-Alaska Pipeline da Ned Rozell
The publisher describes Ned Rozell's tale da far better than I can:
"'I took my dog for a walk last spring,' says Ned Rozell 'and we didn't come home until fall.' In Walking My Dog, Jane, readers travel along with Ned and Jane, his Cioccolato Labrador, as they walk 800 miles across Alaska along the trans-Alaska pipeline, beginning in the south at Valdez and ending at Prudhoe baia on the Arctic Ocean. Rozell describes the extraordinary wildlife and spectacular scenery of Alaska, but perhaps the greatest wonders in this story are the people who live near the pipeline. As Rozell discovers on his 120-day journey, the frontier still exists in Alaska, but it's not the same frontier that stampeders encountered 100 years ago, o the one to which pipeline workers rushed 20 years ago. Instead, it is a spirit found in these people who live there, now, at the end of the century."
I heard Ned Rozell talk about his tale when Michael Feldman's NPR mostra Whad'ya Know visited Alaska (link) and was interested enough to order it online without Leggere it first, which is abnormal for me. I am extremely glad that I did purchase it however and would recommend it to all. Warning: te will feel a strange urge to live on the land in Alaska after reading.
Japanland: A anno in cerca of Wa da Karin Muller
Karin Muller once wrote me an email! Of course it was in response to an email I wrote to her praising her books, but it was admittedly a thrill realizing that a famous autore wrote to ME. Karin Muller is all that I want to be: strongly independent; adventurous; multi-lingual; a published writer and TV travel mostra host. Her book Japanland details her attempt to fit into Japanese society despite a harsh host mother and being a bold blonde amongst the dainty and conservative. Despite her ever-growing fractuous personal relationship with her host family, Muller still manages to reveal the Giappone that most can only dream of experiencing.
Muller has also written entertaining tales about South America (Along the Inca Road: A Woman's Journey into an Ancient Empire) and Vietnam ( Hitchhiking Vietnam : A Woman's Solo Journey in an Elusive Land) but Japanland is a personal favorite.
Kabul Beauty School da Deborah Rodriguez
To be fair, there are traces of link regarding this book. I knew that before I read it. But I still wanted to and am glad that I did. Deborah Rodriguez, a "flamboyant beautician from Michigan", shares with readers her life in Afghanistan amid attempts to build a beauty salon school for local afgano, afghan women. The ugliness of their life is, for the moment, gone while they learn color therapy in respect to hair dye and how to perm with the 'proper' tools. But of course, the ugliness is only gone for fractions of a second. Abusive husbands, both afgano, afghan and American, terrorists as neighbors, and lack of supplies threaten the school at every turn. A well-written book. Controversal both in and out of Afghanistan -- but for such opposing reasons: religious extreminism vs humanitarian capitalism.
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Soapbox articolo da Cressida Hanson
While I have only discovered Bill Bryson's works within the past year, I have whole-heartedly fallen in Amore with his writings. Why? Because they are the freaking funniest things I have ever read. He delights in depicting the strange and the awkward, which usually turns out to be him. This "God Dad! [teenage eyes rolling in disdain, can't believing that they are related]" theme runs throughout his books, adding *pop* and *crackle* to his extremely informative self-travel journeys. A Walk in the Woods is about his hike along the US Appalachian Trail; In A Sunburned Country is about Bryson's travels across Australia; I'm a Stranger Here Myself: Notes on Returning to America After 20 Years Away is (as the titolo so prominently points out) about returning to the American lifestyle after twenty years of living in England. "Woods" and "Sunburned" are full-fledged libri about his trips; "Stranger" is a collection of columns that he wrote for British Sunday newspaper readers, gathered up so non-British audiences could enjoy them too. It probably is my preferito of the three although it might be because it was the first one of his writings that I read. And as we all know, one never forgets their first love.
Under the Tuscan Sun da Frances Mayes
It is strangely hard for me to write about this book because I am too close to it -- I read it whenever I feel homesick, wintersick, any kind of sick. Her words paint an enchanting picture of Cortona, Italy where she and her partner buy and restore a secondo house, and are slowly absorbed into the daily Italian life. Every giorno reveals a new discovery for Mayes, whether it be a local Etruscan artifact (the Etruscans preceded the Romans) o that every oliva oil has a distinctive taste. Though her life is not always perfect, it it always painted with the most colorful descriptions. Leggere Under the Tuscan Sun makes me want to follow in her footsteps. I feel an extra connection dato that I have spent several summers in Italy and she mentions my two hometowns, San Francisco and Palo Alto, CA. da FAR better than the movie but if te pick up a more-recent edition of Under the Tuscan Sun, Mayes offers an interesting perspective on the movie-making experience. Perfecto!
Walking My Dog, Jane: From Valdez to Prudhoe baia Along the Trans-Alaska Pipeline da Ned Rozell
The publisher describes Ned Rozell's tale da far better than I can:
"'I took my dog for a walk last spring,' says Ned Rozell 'and we didn't come home until fall.' In Walking My Dog, Jane, readers travel along with Ned and Jane, his Cioccolato Labrador, as they walk 800 miles across Alaska along the trans-Alaska pipeline, beginning in the south at Valdez and ending at Prudhoe baia on the Arctic Ocean. Rozell describes the extraordinary wildlife and spectacular scenery of Alaska, but perhaps the greatest wonders in this story are the people who live near the pipeline. As Rozell discovers on his 120-day journey, the frontier still exists in Alaska, but it's not the same frontier that stampeders encountered 100 years ago, o the one to which pipeline workers rushed 20 years ago. Instead, it is a spirit found in these people who live there, now, at the end of the century."
I heard Ned Rozell talk about his tale when Michael Feldman's NPR mostra Whad'ya Know visited Alaska (link) and was interested enough to order it online without Leggere it first, which is abnormal for me. I am extremely glad that I did purchase it however and would recommend it to all. Warning: te will feel a strange urge to live on the land in Alaska after reading.
Japanland: A anno in cerca of Wa da Karin Muller
Karin Muller once wrote me an email! Of course it was in response to an email I wrote to her praising her books, but it was admittedly a thrill realizing that a famous autore wrote to ME. Karin Muller is all that I want to be: strongly independent; adventurous; multi-lingual; a published writer and TV travel mostra host. Her book Japanland details her attempt to fit into Japanese society despite a harsh host mother and being a bold blonde amongst the dainty and conservative. Despite her ever-growing fractuous personal relationship with her host family, Muller still manages to reveal the Giappone that most can only dream of experiencing.
Muller has also written entertaining tales about South America (Along the Inca Road: A Woman's Journey into an Ancient Empire) and Vietnam ( Hitchhiking Vietnam : A Woman's Solo Journey in an Elusive Land) but Japanland is a personal favorite.
Kabul Beauty School da Deborah Rodriguez
To be fair, there are traces of link regarding this book. I knew that before I read it. But I still wanted to and am glad that I did. Deborah Rodriguez, a "flamboyant beautician from Michigan", shares with readers her life in Afghanistan amid attempts to build a beauty salon school for local afgano, afghan women. The ugliness of their life is, for the moment, gone while they learn color therapy in respect to hair dye and how to perm with the 'proper' tools. But of course, the ugliness is only gone for fractions of a second. Abusive husbands, both afgano, afghan and American, terrorists as neighbors, and lack of supplies threaten the school at every turn. A well-written book. Controversal both in and out of Afghanistan -- but for such opposing reasons: religious extreminism vs humanitarian capitalism.
-----
Soapbox articolo da Cressida Hanson
1. The Twilight Saga- most people have herd about it and If te have not I'll tell te some about it.. Well a human girl and a Vampire fall in Amore But a werewolf wants her to Amore him...you gotta read to see who wins!
2-Dear John- I'm Leggere this now, so far it is about a male named John falls deaply inlove with a woman named Savannah, but he is in the Army so you'll have to read and see what happends :)
3-Hatchet- I have read this book for school it is very good. Its about a boy named Brian and his plane crashed and he was left in the woods with nothing but a hatchet. Does he leave o does he die? read and find out!
4-Were The Red felce Grows, it's about a dog and his Amore for dogs...
5-Distant waves-its about a young woman and her mother is a mediun and she has faked it...you'll have to read to see what happends
2-Dear John- I'm Leggere this now, so far it is about a male named John falls deaply inlove with a woman named Savannah, but he is in the Army so you'll have to read and see what happends :)
3-Hatchet- I have read this book for school it is very good. Its about a boy named Brian and his plane crashed and he was left in the woods with nothing but a hatchet. Does he leave o does he die? read and find out!
4-Were The Red felce Grows, it's about a dog and his Amore for dogs...
5-Distant waves-its about a young woman and her mother is a mediun and she has faked it...you'll have to read to see what happends