Finding Song in Sorrow

Finding Song in Sorrow
Author: Nechama Dina Wasserman Laber
Publisher:
Total Pages: 302
Release: 2019-08-05
Genre:
ISBN: 9780578556529

In Finding Song in Sorrow, Nechama Dina Wasserman Laber shares her transformative life journey, beginning with the untimely passing of her father, Rabbi Azriel Yitzchok Wasserman, when she was only ten years old. In the 30 years that follow, she documents both her painful grief, as well as her ambitious dreams to further her father's legacy of teaching and outreach. Throughout life's challenges, she holds on to her father's inspirational teachings and looks for G-d's master plan. Through a series of heaven-sent messengers, Nechama learns to deeply feel her buried emotions, and eventually transform her sadness into the joy of legacy. Nechama has been creating curricula and teaching for over 25 years in her role as a community leader, educator and camp director. Her greatest pride is her role as mother of her eleven children K"H and grandmother. Today, as the founder and global director of Jewish Girls Unite, she educates future generations of Jewish leaders and empowers women and girls to shine their inner light. She uses the wisdom of Torah and her personal journey to guide others as a spiritual mentor and coach.

Song of Sorrow

Song of Sorrow
Author: Melinda Salisbury
Publisher: Sorrow
Total Pages: 384
Release: 2019-03-07
Genre:
ISBN: 9781407180281

The thrilling conclusion to STATE OF SORROW by best-selling fantasy author Melinda Salisbury. Sorrow Ventaxis has won the election, and in the process lost everything... Governing under the sinister control of Vespus Corrigan, and isolated from her friends, Sorrow must to find a way to free herself from his web and save her people. But Vespus has no plans to let her go, and he isn't the only enemy Sorrow faces as the curse of her name threatens to destroy her and everything she's fought for.

Cries of Joy, Songs of Sorrow

Cries of Joy, Songs of Sorrow
Author: Marc L. Moskowitz
Publisher: University of Hawaii Press
Total Pages: 186
Release: 2009-11-24
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0824837657

Since the mid-1990s, Taiwan’s unique brand of Mandopop (Mandarin Chinese–language pop music) has dictated the musical tastes of the mainland and the rest of Chinese-speaking Asia. Cries of Joy, Songs of Sorrow explores Mandopop’s surprisingly complex cultural implications in Taiwan and the PRC, where it has established new gender roles, created a vocabulary to express individualism, and introduced transnational culture to a country that had closed its doors to the world for twenty years. In his early chapters, Marc L. Moskowitz provides the historical background necessary to understand the contemporary Mandopop scene, beginning with the birth of Chinese popular music in the East Asian jazz Mecca of 1920s Shanghai. A brief overview of alternative musical genres in the PRC such as Beijing rock and revolutionary opera is included. The section concludes with a look at the manner in which Taiwan’s musical ethos has influenced the mainland’s music industry and how Mandopop has brought Western music and cultural values to the PRC. This leads to a discussion of Taiwan pop’s exceptional hybridity, beginning with foreign influences during the colonial period under the Dutch and Japanese and continuing with the country’s political, cultural, and economic alliance with the U.S. Moskowitz addresses the resulting wealth of transnational musical influences from the rest of East Asia and the U.S. and Taiwan pop’s appeal to audiences in both the PRC and Taiwan. In doing so, he explores how Mandopop’s "songs of sorrow," with their ubiquitous themes of loneliness and isolation, engage a range of emotional expression that resonates strongly in the PRC. Later chapters examine the construction of male and female identities in Mandopop and look at the widespread condemnation of the genre by critics. Drawing on analyses and data from earlier chapters (including interviews with dozens of performers, song writers, and lay people in Taipei and Shanghai), Moskowitz attempts to answer the question: Why, if the music is as bad as some assert, is it so central to the lives of the largest population in the world? To answer, he highlights Mandopop’s important contribution as a poetic lament that simultaneously embraces and protests modern life. Cries of Joy, Songs of Sorrow is a highly readable introduction to an important but understudied East Asian phenomenon. It will find a ready audience among scholars and students of Chinese and Taiwanese popular culture as well as musicologists studying transnational music flows and non-Western popular music.

Sorrow's Song

Sorrow's Song
Author: Keri Arthur
Publisher: KA Publishing PTY LTD
Total Pages: 314
Release: 2022-06-28
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0648768767

They say breaking up is hard to do. They’re wrong. Living with the consequences is so much harder, especially when sorrow is a powerful draw to evil … Lizzie Grace is trying to get on with her life now that she and Aiden have gone their separate ways, but it’s a difficult thing to do when just about everything reminds her of the damn man. The situation is made worse when a body is found, and her job as Deputy Reservation Witch means she has no choice but to interact with him. At first, the death seems to be nothing more than an accidental drowning in a remote location, but it’s soon evident a supernatural entity is involved. As they race to uncover what is going on, it becomes clear that this evil is not only targeting werewolves, but one particular pack—the O’Connor’s. And the reason might well be the song of sorrow. A song that Lizzie’s grief might have given birth to…

Mourning Songs: Poems of Sorrow and Beauty

Mourning Songs: Poems of Sorrow and Beauty
Author: Grace Schulman
Publisher: New Directions Publishing
Total Pages: 141
Release: 2019-05-28
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 0811228673

A beautiful, compact, gift edition of some of the world’s greatest poems about loss and death, to ease the heart of the bereaved Who has not suffered grief? In Mourning Songs, the brilliant poet and editor Grace Schulman has gathered together the most moving poems about sorrow by the likes of Elizabeth Bishop, William Carlos Williams, Gwendolyn Brooks, Neruda, Catullus, Dylan Thomas, W. H. Auden, Shakespeare, Emily Dickinson, W. S. Merwin, Lorca, Denise Levertov, Keats, Hart Crane, Michael Palmer, Robert Frost, Hopkins, Hardy, Bei Dao, and Czeslaw Milosz—to name only some of the masters in this slim volume. “The poems in this collection,” as Schulman notes in her introduction, “sing of grief as they praise life.” She notes, “As any bereaved survivor knows, there is no consolation. ‘Time doesn’t heal grief; it emphasizes it,’ wrote Marianne Moore. The loss of a loved one never leaves us. We don’t want it to. In grief, one remembers the beloved. But running beside it, parallel to it, is the joy of existence, the love that causes pain of loss, the loss that enlarges us with the wonder of existence.”

Songs of Sorrow

Songs of Sorrow
Author: Samuel Charters
Publisher: Univ. Press of Mississippi
Total Pages: 467
Release: 2015-04-29
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1626745307

In the spring of 1862, Lucy McKim, the nineteen-year-old daughter of a Philadelphia abolitionist Quaker family, traveled with her father to the Sea Islands of South Carolina to aid him in his efforts to organize humanitarian aid for thousands of newly freed slaves. During her stay she heard the singing of the slaves in their churches, as they rowed their boats from island to island, and as they worked and played. Already a skilled musician, she determined to preserve as much of the music as she could, quickly writing down words and melodies, some of them only fleeting improvisations. Upon her return to Philadelphia, she began composing musical settings for the songs and in the fall of 1862 published the first serious musical arrangements of slave songs. She also wrote about the musical characteristics of slave songs, and published, in a leading musical journal of the time, the first article to discuss what she had witnessed. In Songs of Sorrow: Lucy McKim Garrison and “Slave Songs of the United States,” renowned music scholar Samuel Charters tells McKim's personal story. Letters reveal the story of young women's lives during the harsh years of the war. At the same time that her arrangements of the songs were being published, a man with whom she had an unofficial “attachment” was killed in battle, and the war forced her to temporarily abandon her work. In 1865 she married Wendell Phillips Garrison, son of abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison, and in the early months of their marriage she proposed that they turn to the collection of slave songs that had long been her dream. She and her husband—a founder and literary editor of the recently launched journal The Nation—enlisted the help of two associates who had also collected songs in the Sea Islands. Their book, Slave Songs of the United States, appeared in 1867. After a long illness, ultimately ending in paralysis, she died at the age of thirty-four in 1877. This book reclaims the story of a pioneer in ethnomusicology, one whose influential work affected the Fisk Jubilee Singers and many others.

Sorrow

Sorrow
Author: Tiffanie Debartolo
Publisher: Woodhall Press Llp
Total Pages: 270
Release: 2020-10-20
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781949116304

Joe Harper has backpedaled throughout his life. A once-promising guitar prodigy, he's been living without direction since abandoning his musical dreams. Now into his thirties, having retreated from every opportunity he's had to level up, he has lost his family, his best friend, and his own self-respect.

The Song of Everlasting Sorrow

The Song of Everlasting Sorrow
Author: Anyi Wang
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Total Pages: 452
Release: 2008
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0231143427

The Song of Everlasting Sorrow follows the adventures of Wang Qiyao, a girl born of the crowded, labyrinthine alleys of Shanghai's working-class neighborhoods. Infatuated with the glitz and glamour of 1940s Hollywood, Wang Qiyao seeks fame in the Miss Shanghai beauty pageant, and this fleeting moment of stardom becomes the pinnacle of her life. After the Communist victory, Wang Qiyao continues to indulge in the decadent pleasures of the Shanghai bourgeoisie, secretly playing mahjong during the antirightist campaign and exchanging lovers on the eve of the Cultural Revolution. She reemerges in the 1980s as a purveyor of "old Shanghai," only to become embroiled in a tragedy that echoes the Hollywood noirs of her youth.

Sorrow's Sweet Song

Sorrow's Sweet Song
Author: S.B. Matthews
Publisher: Fulton Books, Inc.
Total Pages: 149
Release: 2022-09-27
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1638601615

Dr. Megan Rusco has a secret, a secret no one can know. She is in love with a man she cannot have. Megan is in love with one of her patients. Living a solitary life in the Idaho countryside, Lenny Harris had watched his wife, Vicky, die from the ravages of breast cancer a few years earlier. Immersing himself into his work was the only way he knew to cope with her loss, and for a long time, Lenny's work was his life. Today Lenny has an appointment to see Megan. Whenever he was in the examining room with her, Lenny always noticed a certain tension between them, but he always blew it off, knowing that it would be impossible to have any kind of relationship with his doctor. As he walked to his car that day, Lenny sensed what was going to happen, but little does he know that after this day, neither one of their lives will ever be the same. Through the pain and guilt and the sorrow and regret that will envelope their lives over the next ten years. The most unlikely events will lead them on a path back to each other.

Broken Bonds

Broken Bonds
Author: Keri Arthur
Publisher: KA Publishing PTY LTD
Total Pages: 324
Release: 2021-10-26
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0648768686

The winds of change are finally whispering through the Faelan Werewolf Reservation… Lizzie Grace is doing her utmost to ignore the portents of doom, wanting nothing more than enjoy her life and her time with Aiden O’Connor while she still can. But the song of the once unprotected and very powerful wellspring still washes across the distant shores of darkness, and it continues to draw evil to the reservation. The one that arrives this time is different from the others. Not only is it skilled in magic, but its kills are very specific. Very targeted. As the brutal deaths mount up and she, Monty, and Aiden struggle to find answers and stop the killings, Lizzie begins to suspect there’s more to this particular evil than meets the eye. Especially when it helps save the life of a child. But the biggest threat to Lizzie comes not in the form of evil, but rather the changes whispered on the wind. Because the werewolf Aiden once asked to be his wife has finally arrived back in the reservation. And she’s determined to get her man.