Voices from St. Simons

Voices from St. Simons
Author: Stephen M. G. Doster
Publisher: John F Blair Pub
Total Pages: 259
Release: 2008
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780895873576

Excerpts from interviews with 17 people whose connection to St. Simons Island, GA, tells the story of the island's heritage.

Voices of a Nation

Voices of a Nation
Author: Jean Folkerts
Publisher: Allyn & Bacon
Total Pages: 612
Release: 2002
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9780205335466

This text presents a cultural interpretation of the history of both traditional and nontraditional media, emphasizing that minority as well as mainstream media have impacted American history. Voices of a Nation sets media history in the context of overall historical events and themes and tries to understand the role of media in a democratic society at varied historical points. Organized chronologically, the text recognizes the significant "voices" of such non-traditional media as suffrage newspapers, ethnic newspapers, and cultural movement papers and magazines.

Don't Look, Ethel!

Don't Look, Ethel!
Author: Nicholas Doster
Publisher: Covenant Books, Inc.
Total Pages: 218
Release: 2023-06-05
Genre: Humor
ISBN: 1685268641

It's human nature to look at something when you have emphatically been told not to look. Those of mythological lore who looked directly at Medusa, the snake-headed creature, were instantly turned to stone. Lot's wife, in the book of Genesis, could not resist to look back even after God had strongly advised her not to. As we know, her one peek instantly and infamously made her the first box of Morton Salt. Similarly, Ethel, in Ray Stevens's 1974 hit song, "The Streak," ignored her protective husband's earnest pleas not to look at a serial streaker. Ethel did not turn to stone or salt, but she did lose her clothes as a result of her looking. My suspect friends, Bacon and Genius, would highly implore you NOT to read this book. However, if you would like quick doses of humor, inspiration, and wisdom, this book just may be what you are looking for. Can you resist? What will your fate be if you do look? The choice is in your hands. Proceed at your own risk! Certainly, it could do no harm to take just one little peek...

The Voices Within

The Voices Within
Author: Charles Fernyhough
Publisher: Basic Books
Total Pages: 322
Release: 2016-10-04
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 0465096816

A luminous exploration of the nature of thoughts, from daydreams to the voices in our heads At the moment you caught sight of this book, what were you thinking? Was your thought a stream of sensations? Or was it a voice in your head? Did you ask yourself, "I wonder what that's about?" Did you answer? And what does it mean if you did? When someone says they hear voices in their head, they are often thought to be mentally ill. But, as Charles Fernyhough argues in The Voices Within, such voices are better understood as one of the chief hallmarks of human thought. Our inner voices can be self-assured, funny, profound, hesitant, or mean; they can appear in different accents and even in sign language. We all hear them-and we needn't fear them. Indeed, we cannot live without them: we need them, whether to make decisions or to bring a book's characters to life as we read. Studying them can enrich our understanding of ourselves, and our understanding of the world around us; it can help us understand the experiences of visionary saints, who might otherwise be dismissed as schizophrenics; to alleviate the suffering of those who do have mental health problems; and to understand why the person next to us on the subway just burst out laughing for no apparent reason. Whether the voices in our heads are meandering lazily or clashing chaotically, they deserve to be heard. Bustling with insights from literature, film, art, and psychology, The Voices Within offers more than science; it powerfully entreats us all to take some time to hear ourselves think.

At Home on St. Simons

At Home on St. Simons
Author: Eugenia Price
Publisher: Turner Publishing Company
Total Pages: 81
Release: 2021-08-17
Genre: History
ISBN: 1684427444

Here, for the first time outside the pages of a small Island newspaper called Georgia’s Coastal Illustrated, Eugenia shares with her worldwide reading public, some of what life was like during the first years in which she and her best friend and fellow writer, Joyce Blackburn, were becoming Islanders. “These short pieces,” Genie says, “include my observations day by day of what it was like, at last, to be at home on St. Simons. We were learning how to be neighbors, after so many years of complex life in the huge northern city of Chicago; learning how to care deeply for people with whom, at first glance, we had little in common. We were understanding what it really meant to have come home.” Eugenia Price, called by many St. Simons’ own “beloved invader,” tells you here about those early years as they were being lived. Her St. Simons Memoir, cherished by thousands, was written from memory and notes in old desk calendars, but At Home on St. Simons illuminates some of the experiences which most changed her—as they occurred. More than fourteen million people have read Eugenia Price’s books which have been translated into fifteen languages. Much of the magic these millions remember so vividly years after the reading, began in the simple, sad, joyous, and absorbing events related to this singular volume. Never before published is a brand new opening chapter, in which Ms. Price attempts to explain—almost as to herself—why, in the face of such drastic change on the once provincial little coastal island, she is still at home on St. Simons. Her readers do not have to see the Island firsthand, to recognize their own response to her sense of place.

Beauty from Ashes

Beauty from Ashes
Author: Eugenia Price
Publisher: Macmillan
Total Pages: 656
Release: 1996-06-15
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780312959173

Third book in the Georgia trilogy about the Coupers and the Frasers, tells the story of Anne, trying to hold her life together at a time when the country is being torn apart by talk of civil war.

The One Voice of James Dickey

The One Voice of James Dickey
Author: James Dickey
Publisher: University of Missouri Press
Total Pages: 517
Release: 2003
Genre: Authors, American
ISBN: 0826263070

"In The One Voice of James Dickey, Gordon Van Ness skillfully documents James Dickey's growth from a callow teen interested primarily in sports to a mature poet who possessed literary genius and who deliberately advanced himself and his career. The letters from 1942 through 1969 depict Dickey gradually establishing a self-identity, deciding to write, struggling to determine a subject matter and style, working determinedly to gain initial recognition, and eventually seeking out the literary establishment to promote himself and his views on poetry. The letters also portray a complex personality with broad interests, acute intelligence, and heightened imagination as well as a deep need to re-create his past and assume various roles in the present." "From Dickey's extensive correspondence, Van Ness has selected not only those letters that best reveal the chronological development of Dickey's career and his conscious efforts to chart its course, but also those that portray his other interests and depict the various features of his personality. The letters are grouped by decade, with each period placed in perspective by a critical introduction. The introductory sections offer a psychological understanding of Dickey's personality by identifying the needs and fears that affected his actions. They also explain the American literary and cultural scene that Dickey confronted as he matured. Together, the letters and commentary yield a sense of Dickey's complex personality - both the man as a writer and the writer as a man - while arguing that he remained "one voice."" "Because how a writer writes - the appearance of a writer's words on a page - makes a statement, the letters are reproduced here without alterations. There are no silent deletions or revisions; the original spelling and punctuation have been preserved. Dickey's letters gathered in The One Voice of James Dickey portray a poet's consciousness, chronicling its growth and revealing its breadth. They do not contain the whole truth, but they are what we have."--Jacket.