A Perfect Home for a Family

A Perfect Home for a Family
Author: David Lee Harrison
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2013
Genre: Animals
ISBN: 9780823423385

A family of raccoons searches for the perfect home, only to find that what they had been looking for is right under their noses.

Gibsons & Orrs: Pioneer Families

Gibsons & Orrs: Pioneer Families
Author: Laura Wayland-Smith Hatch
Publisher: Lulu.com
Total Pages: 626
Release: 2016-02-04
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1329877713

The descendants of Alexander & Elizabeth Votah Gibson and William Orr. Many of the descendants who settled in Fremont County, Iowa, are traced to the present, including biographies and photographs when available. Also included in the book is documentation of one branch of the William & Keziah Snead Keyser family.

Tony Harrison

Tony Harrison
Author: Sandie Byrne
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 336
Release: 1997
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0198184301

AbbreviationsForeword, Lord GowrieIntroduction: Tony Harrison's Public Poetry, Sandie Byrne1. The Best Poet of 1961, Desmond Graham2. Tony Harrison the Playwright, Richard Eyre3. v. by Tony Harrison, or Production No. 73095, LWT Arts, Melvyn Bragg4. On Not Being Milton, Marvell, or Gray, Sandie Byrne5. Open to Experience: Structure and Exploration in Tony Harrison's Poetry, Jem Poster6. Culture and Debate, Christopher Butler7. Book Ends: Harrison's Public and Private Poetry, N.S. Thompson8. Tony Harrison and the Guardian, Alan Rusbridger9. Doomsongs: Tony Harrison and War, Rick Rylance10. The.

Descanso for My Father

Descanso for My Father
Author: Harrison Candelaria Fletcher
Publisher: U of Nebraska Press
Total Pages: 165
Release: 2012-03-01
Genre: Family & Relationships
ISBN: 0803240163

When his father died, Harrison Candelaria Fletcher wasn’t quite two. His mother packed up his father’s belongings, put the boxes in a hall closet, and closed the door. The “man in a box” remained a mystery, hardly mentioned, and making only rare appearances in stories when Fletcher or his siblings inquired. Meanwhile, his young Hispanic mother transformed herself into an artist, scouting the back roads and secondhand shops of New Mexico for relics and unlikely treasures to add to her “little shrines,” or descansos. “Look closely,” she’d say to her son. “Everything tells a story.” This book is Fletcher’s literary descanso, a piecing together—from moments and objects and words—of a father’s life, of the life lived without that father, and of his own mixed-race identity. Fletcher’s reflections unfold like a collage, offering a rich array of images and stories of life with his single mother, organizing weekend family car trips to explore graveyards and adobe ruins; of growing up on the fault lines of class and culture; of being a father who never had one of his own to learn from. From incidents and observations, Fletcher assembles a beautifully crafted portrait of his family’s unspoken affliction with loss over the decades, a portrait that finally evokes the father at its heart.