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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "georgia", sorted by average review score:

Georgia O'Keeffe Journal: Petunia
Published in Hardcover by Chronicle Books (September, 1995)
Author: San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
Average review score:

Lined journal
I liked this journal because it was lined. The lined pages are good for those of us who can't write in a straight line when we're angry, excited, or upset.

Perfect Journal!
This journal was perfect. Spiral bound is really nice when looking for a journal, then you can easily flip the pages. It's lined, which is great! And the paper is pretty thick, pens won't bleed through to the other side! I highly recommend this journal!


Georgia O'Keeffe: A Life
Published in Paperback by University Press of New England (February, 1999)
Authors: Roxana Robinson and Georgia O'Keeffe
Average review score:

An Incredible Biography
"A Life" is the best book on painter Georgia O'Keeffe available. Every moment in Georgia's life is written about with painstaking detail. Nothing is missed. From her relationship with Alfred Steiglitz and his entourage from "291" to her intimate relationship with sculptor Juan Hamilton. I can't say enough how amazing this book is and how enjoyable it is to read.

A Beautiful and Engaging Tribute to a Brilliant Artist
Georgia O'Keeffe's life was one lived with courage and beauty and Robinson does her justice by writing this beautiful and engaging biography. The author delves into O'Keeffe's life and the passion of her work by describing her family history, her evolution as an artist, and perhaps more important to O'Keeffe, her evolution toward becoming her true self. The extra and vital layer that adds even more depth to this biography is Robinson's description of the art scene and the philosophies of art circulating in early 20th century New York.

This book would be of interest not only to those who enjoy O'Keeffe's work but also to those who are trying to become themselves, those who are interested in the history of art in America, or those who like to read for the sake of feeling beautiful words flowing through their mind.

This book was difficult for me to put down and I didn't want it to end. Roxana Robinson's work is a gem.


Georgia O'Keeffe: The Poetry of Things
Published in Paperback by Phillips Collections (April, 1999)
Author: Elizabeth Hutton Turner
Average review score:

wonderful gift
I sent this book as a gift, based on the glowing review on this page. My donee/friend wrote: "What a wonderful surprise and delight the O'Keefe book has brought me today! It is indeed something very special, with elegant color illustrations, plus many photos from various times of her life, and biographical details all through the text. There is a wonderful photo of her (by Ansel Adams) -- she wears a dark sweater, and is sitting, sketching, at the rocky entrance to what may be a cave --- and all of her design ideas seem to be there in the photo: her own interesting form, contrasts of dark and light, austerity yet beautiful rhythms....I had no idea what a pathfinder she was, going her own road by interpreting objects in an entirely personal way. Everything has her magic touch. The color plates are excellent." I have her permission to send these comments to you.

Outstanding book from an outstanding exhibition
This is the companion catalog to the O'Keeffe exhibition at the Phillips gallery in Washington, DC, and is a wonderful volume on O'Keeffe whether or not you were fortunate enough to see this exhibition. What impressed me most about the exhibition (and the book) is how intelligently it was put together. It examines O'Keeffe's development as an artist by tracking both her philosphy and her influences, and some rarely shown works were chosen to represent this in the exhibition (and are reproduced in the book). Of all the books on O'Keeffe that I've read, and of all the exhibitions I've seen of her work, this one by far does the best job of explaining both the artist and her work.


Growing Up Cuban in Decatur, Georgia
Published in Audio Cassette by Peachtree Publishers (November, 1995)
Author: Carmen Agra Deedy
Average review score:

Love, Laughs and Tears
Carman Agra Deedy is outstanding. My granddaughters can't get enough of this tape. We all love to listen as we travel in the car. I've about worn it out.I've been a fan of hers since she first published agatha's Featherbed and used that book all over the country doing teacher workshops.
As the principal of an elementary school in SC, I'd loved to find out how to get a hold of Mrs. Agra Deedy to cotract for her to come to my school.

Growing Up Cuban in Decatur GA
This book on tape was the best one that I have ever listened to! The content, stories of the author's childhood, were emotionally captivating. There are areas that every single person can relate to - funny, sad, inspiring and enlightening. Ms Deedy's tales brought me back to my childhood (growing up in a large Italian family in a small town).

This is a great car tape, because the stories are all individual and relatively brief, making it easy to 'pop' the tape in for great entertainment!


Hidden Fear
Published in Paperback by PublishAmerica (June, 2002)
Author: Georgia Parsons
Average review score:

A Must Read
The characters are intriguing and you won't want to put it down until you find out "who dunnit"!

A great tale!
An underlying sense of tension and urgency runs like a thread through this exciting mystery and carries you to the surprise ending. I would never have guessed the outcome. Interesting characters and an intriguing plot make this a mystery you won't want to put down.


Italian American: The Scorsese Family Cookbook
Published in Hardcover by Random House (November, 1996)
Authors: Catherine Scorsese and Georgia Downard
Average review score:

Abondanza Again!
Without a doubt, this is my most favorite of cookbooks. It's not the most thorough and it's not the most helpful, but it certainly is the most fun. The cover, a snapshot from the movie "Good Fellas" shows Catherine Scorsese (as Tommy's mother) sitting at a table having just served three gangsters a midnight snack; the gangsters are Joe Pesci (Tommy), Robert DeNiro (who, Catherine claims, thinks she makes the best pizza in the world), and Ray Liota. This book is filled with simple Italian-American recipes handed down through the years on both the Scorsese side and the Cappa side (Catherine's family). The most famous of these recipes is the first--tomato sauce with meat--and meatballs--which every good Italian American knows is consumed on Sundays--that's the tradition. There are veal recipes and recipes for soups (Catherine's lentil soup is the best--I've made it). And of course there's the previously mentioned pizza (sausage or pepperoni) about which Robert DeNiro raves. There are also several dessert recipes--the Sicilian Cake, with ricotta cheese and heavy cream providing the center--being the best. There are transcripts included from Scorsese's documentary--"Italianamerican"--from which the title of this book comes. Catherine and her husband Charlie reminisce about life in New York's Little Italy on Mulberry, Mott, and Elizabeth Streets. There are several charming black and white photos of the family through the years--the Scorseses, with little "Marty," standing beside the Christmas tree which the old folks "didn't go for." The anecdotes are sometimes hilarious; Catherine and her sister-in-law, for example, laugh about how they'd go to DiPalo's deli and make fun of the way customers pronounced such words as "ricotta"--it's rigotta--and "capicole"--it's capicoli. The praise on the back of the book, from Francis Ford Coppola, summs it up: "I am very happy that Katie's recipes are being published, so that I can immediately start trying them out." In fact, in Coppola's restaurant in Belize, there is the famous dish, "Mrs. Scorsese's Lemon Chicken."

This book makes a lovely contribution to any cookbook collection. In fact, it's the one guests always seem to pull from the shelf and thumb through. My copy, of course, is stained from years of use. There are tomato sauce stains and cheese smudges. The pages are as tasy as the actual dishes themselves.

Enjoy!

great Italian cooking
i found the recepes very good and tasty the family had a great flare for cooking I tried many of them what can I say but God bless the family for puttin out such a great italian cook book


Let My Children Go: A Mother's Journal
Published in Paperback by Kinderlex Books (February, 2003)
Author: Wendy Titelman
Average review score:

Should be made mandatory reading for county social workers
Wendy Titelman's Let My Children Go! is the powerful and true story of a mother's fight to shield her daughters from sexual abuse, -- and the refusal of the Cobb County, Georgia, Superior Court to protect those children from their abusive father. Told with gut-wrenching emotion, Let My Children Go! is a sharp indictment against a legal system that all too often puts children back into the hands of the very ones that hurt and abuse them. Let My Children Go should be made mandatory reading for all county social workers, family counselors, and family court judges throughout the country.

A Harrowing Tale of Injustice and Loss
If a man molests a neighbor's child, he'll get jail time. If he molests his own, he'll get custody.

LET MY CHILDREN GO is a story of legal abuse of Wendy Titleman's two little girls, protected only by a mother who is discredited, disenfranchised and discriminated at every step of the way.

Although no evidence was ever heard in court against Ms. Titleman's mothering skills, she has been prohibited from seeing her two young daughters in over two years. Instead, against mounting evidence of the father's abuse and sexual molestation, he was granted sole custody.

It is hard to determine when reading this fast-paced autobiography what is more horrific--the continuing sexual abuse of Amanda and Jessica by their father, the conspiracy of court officials committed to feed one another and protect their mutual incompetence and corruption, the enormous powers a Guardian Ad Litem can commandeer over a family while failing the children she is supposed to represent, the inadequate laws governing family courts which allow a judge discretionary powers for bias and incompetence that are practically impossible to appeal, the outrageous breaking of state and federal laws--including a mother's and children's constitutional rights--or the routine suppression of evidence by all concerned, evidence that could have saved Ms. Titleman's children.

Unlike many protective mothers across the nation, Ms. Titleman still musters the financial resources, psychological stamina and (finally) competent legal support for protracted and costly legal battles even after all the doors were slammed in her face.

LET MY CHILDREN GO should arouse public outrage in Georgia--the wasp-nest of the story--and bring awareness about the way family courts across the nation punish mothers who allege--and can prove--domestic sexual abuse of their children. As a society, we are only as good as the rule of the law--and as we care and protect our children.

Amanda and Jessica are out there, abused and molested, betrayed by our system. They are crying for their mother and they are crying for our nation's help. This book is a must read.

Talia Carner, author PUPPET CHILD ...


Ludell and Willie
Published in Library Binding by Harpercollins Juvenile Books (April, 1977)
Author: Brenda Scott Wilkinson
Average review score:

Great
I first read this book at the age of 11. Ludell & Willie is a young adult love story that you will love forever. Ludell lives with her strict grandmother who hardly ever give her and Willie time along. Willie is the star athlete, so Ludell is alway worried that another girl will take him away since she's can't go out on dates, but Willie alway prove his love. I'm trying to find the sequal for this one, but it's a hard to find book.

I think that this book is a great book about children.
I think this book was a great example of what children go through in life. It tells not only the bad things about growing up it also shows some of the problems that young adults face during the first years adolescents.


Ludell and Willie
Published in Paperback by Bantam Books (February, 1985)
Average review score:

FANTASTIC
I ENCOURAGE ANY AND EVERYONE TO READ THIS BOOK. I LIKE TO READ THINGS THAT ARE RELATED TO THE WAY I WAS BROUGHT UP. ITS A VERY ENCOURAGING BOOK.

this book is fantastic
I HAVE BEEN READING THIS BOOK EVERYSINCE I WAS IN THE NINTH GRADE. THIS BOOK IS ABOUT GROWING UP POOR. AND WITH THE HELP OF HER GRANDMOTHER LUDELL WAS TAUGHT A LOT OF VALUES AND MORALS. IT ALSO HAS TO DO WITH LOVE AND FAITH. BECAUSE AFTER HER GRANDMOTHER DIED, SHE WAS FORCED TO GO LIVE IN NEWYORK WITH HER MOTHER. I LOVE THIS BOOK AND I LET SOMEONE BORROW IT AND IT WAS NEVER RETURNED IS THERE ANY WAY I CAN GO ABOUT OBTAINING ANOTHER ONE IF SO. PLEASE WRITE TO MICHELE JACKSON 2613 MCLELLAND STREET APT. 10 HATTIESBURG, MS. 39401


Maddie Retta Lauren-Georgia, 1864
Published in Unknown Binding by Bt Bound (March, 1901)
Author: Kathleen Duey
Average review score:

great
This was a good American Diaries book. I really like the main character Maddie. if I had a horse, I would want to keep it safe from yankees, although i'm a Yankee.I really like what she does to help the Yankee. i would tell more but I don't want to ruin the book for others. All I'll say is it was a great book and if you like the other American Diaries then you'll like this one.

A southern girl makes an important discovery.
Of all the American Diaries books, Maddie Retta Lauren was my favorite. I really liked the main character, Maddie, a thirteen-year-old Confederate girl. At the beginning she seemed a bit spoiled, but by the end of the book she had definitley changed. She realized that both the Northerners and the Southerners were fighting for what they believed in, and that slavery was wrong. I liked the ending as well because it seemed very realistic to me. I highly reccomend this book to girls ages nine and up looking for a good historical novel.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: VacationBookReview gambia germany Abkhazia
More Pages: georgia Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81