The Yokota Officers Club

The Yokota Officers Club
Author: Sarah Bird
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Total Pages: 402
Release: 2010-11-24
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0307775755

Sarah Bird’s gutsy, sharp, and touching new novel opens at full speed. Bernadette "Bernie" Root, military brat, speaks. She has never really noticed what a peculiar bunch of nomads her eight-member Air Force family is (with the exception of her Post Princess sister, Kit), until the summer after her first year of college when she joins them at their new assignment: Kadena Air Base, Okinawa. Just as Okinawa turns out to be a sorry version of the Japanese paradise Bernie knew in her childhood at Yokota Air Base, her family, especially her once-beautiful mother, Moe, and her former spy-pilot father, Mace, seems to have been in decline since those glory days of the American Raj. Days when her mother was happy and their best friend, Fumiko, now lost to them, was the family’s maid. The worst part of Okinawa for Bernie, though, is realizing how perfectly she fits with her oddball family and how badly she needs to get out. So when a dance contest first prize, a trip to Japan,offers a chance to escape, she takes it, playing second banana to a third-rate comedian on a tour of Japan’s military bases. At their grand finale at the Yokota Officers’ Club, Fumiko finally reappears, and Bernie discovers the terrible price that is paid when the secrets nations hide end up buried within families. A brilliantly appealing novel whose energy, wit, and feeling have won for it (see back of the jacket) extraordinary advance praise.

WLA

WLA
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 478
Release: 2001
Genre: Vietnam War, 1961-1975
ISBN:

Above the East China Sea

Above the East China Sea
Author: Sarah Bird
Publisher: Vintage
Total Pages: 338
Release: 2015-04-28
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1101873868

A Seattle Times Best Book of the Year Okinawa, present day: Luz, a teenage military brat, has moved to the island’s U.S. Air Force base with her mother, a no-nonsense sergeant. Luz’s mother hopes that the move will reconnect them with the Okinawan branch of their family—and help them heal from the death of Luz’s beloved older sister. This is an island where departed spirits mingle with the living, and interwoven with Luz’s narrative is the story of an Okinawan girl, Tamiko Kokuba, who in 1945 was plucked from her high school and trained to work in the Imperial Army’s horrific cave hospitals. Both of these extraordinary young women are seeking peace, and as Luz digs deeper and deeper into her past, their quests will intersect. Above the East China Sea tells the entwined stories of two lives connected across time by the shared experience of loss, the strength of an ancient culture, and the power of family love.

The Flamenco Academy

The Flamenco Academy
Author: Sarah Bird
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Total Pages: 538
Release: 2006
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0345462386

In Albuquerque, New Mexico, two young women become entranced by young flamenco guitarist Toms ̀Montenegro and decide to dedicate themselves to the disciplines and demands of the university's flamenco academy.

How Perfect Is That

How Perfect Is That
Author: Sarah Bird
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 339
Release: 2009-07-07
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 143912308X

Happily entering Austin high society after marrying into a family that made her sign a strict prenuptial agreement, Blythe Young is dumped ten years later for another woman and is forced to take refuge at a housing co-op, where she reunites with the college roommate she had abandoned. Reprint.

Something to Talk About

Something to Talk About
Author: Ann-Marie Cyr
Publisher: Scarecrow Press
Total Pages: 135
Release: 2006-08-02
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1461671256

This is the first book to focus solely on booktalking to adults. Here is an instruction manual and a material sourcebook in one; providing the reader with both step-by-step instructions on how to write a booktalk and 88 samples to use when creating a booktalk program for an adult audience.

The Mommy Club

The Mommy Club
Author: Sarah Bird
Publisher: Doubleday Books
Total Pages: 388
Release: 1991
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780385411233

A young surrogate mother attempts to make an ordered world for her child as she wanders through the maze of trendy yuppiedom to the treacherous waters of her relations with her old love, Sinclair.

GAP YEAR

GAP YEAR
Author:
Publisher: UNICORN CONGLOMERATE
Total Pages: 24
Release:
Genre:
ISBN: 0620817569

THE BOOK IS SPECIALLY TARGETED TO PRIMARY AND HIGH SCHOOL LEARNERS, SPECIFICALLY GRADE 12S, AND TEACHERS. IT IS BASICALLY TO SAY IT'S OKAY TO TAKE A GAP YEAR. IT MAY NOT BE BY CHOICE BUT DUE TO CERTAIN CIRCUMSTANCES. IT IS TO ADVICE GRADE 12S TO RELAX AND ALLOW GOD TO TAKE OVER AND TO KNOW THAT THERE'S A WHOLE LOT OF THINGS THAT CAN BE DONE DURING THE COURSE OF THE GAP YEAR.

The Cold Six Thousand

The Cold Six Thousand
Author: James Ellroy
Publisher: Random House
Total Pages: 690
Release: 2011-12-31
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1448108586

DALLAS, NOVEMBER 22ND, 1963. Wayne Tedrow Jr has arrived to kill a man. The fee is $6,000. He finds himself instead in the middle of the cover-up following JFK's assassination. There follows a hellish five-year ride through the sordid underbelly of public policy via Las Vegas, Howard Hughes, Vietnam, CIA dope dealing, Cuba, sleazy showbiz, racism and the Klan. This is the 1960s under Ellroy's blistering lens, the icons of the era mingled with cops, killers, hoods, and provocateurs. The Cold Six Thousand is historical confluence as American nightmare. Fierce, epic fiction. A masterpiece.

The Writer and the Overseas Childhood

The Writer and the Overseas Childhood
Author: Antje M. Rauwerda
Publisher: McFarland
Total Pages: 204
Release: 2014-01-10
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 078649106X

What does Ian McEwan have in common with Barbara Kingsolver? Or The Shack's William Paul Young with The Way the Crow Flies' Ann-Marie MacDonald? All four spent significant portions of their formative years overseas as expatriates; all four are third culture kids. These authors share experiences of cultural and geographical displacement that fracture constructions of home and identity, as their fiction attests. This study surveys 17 authors with "expat" backgrounds to define "third culture literature," a burgeoning yet unrecognized branch of international writing characterized by expressions of dislocation, loss, and disenfranchisement. By explicating how the shared cultural details of these writers emerge in literary themes and images, this work introduces third culture literature as a separate field, reinterpreting the work of major writers from across the globe.