Wednesday, September 08, 2010

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Posts Tagged ‘Memoir’

Nose to Nose: A Memoir of Healing

Product Description
Nose to Nose is a memoir about healing. Recovering from emergency surgery in a foreign country, Barry Schieber finds himself buying a puppy to bring back to Montana. He had never thought of owning a dog, any dog–let alone one that will soon tip the scales at over a hundred pounds.

Once home, wherever they go, Moritz draws people to him. Sensing something therapeutic about Moritz, Barry comes upon a way to share this quality with others. So begins their partnership for weekly volunteer visits at a local hospital.

As this chronicle unfolds, the reader comes to appreciate, with Barry, how a seemingly simple interaction with Moritz leads to healing and to engaging in the lives of others.

Nose to Nose: A Memoir of Healing

Karla Klear Sky: A Meth Addict’s Mother’s Memoir

Product Description
If you are the parent of a chemically addicted son or daughter, you have found the right book. A mother’s life explodes when she discovers her son is a meth addict. As he disappears into addiction, it takes her with him, until she learns, parents can recover even if their children don’t. This riveting story tells the savage truth: Addiction stalks children with a single-minded purpose to kill its host and the family near and dear to it. Lifted from a private journal and dotted with humor, but also graphic and explicit, it equips parents. This blunt confessional is a multi-media project that fast-forwards relief. A first of its kind, this combined portrait, memoir and companion musical CD, prepare parents for the rigors of recovery. Powerful and deeply moving, both deliver help in a compelling package. To purchase the CD, please see link back cover.

Karla Klear Sky: A Meth Addict’s Mother’s Memoir

More, Now, Again: A Memoir of Addiction

Product Description

Elizabeth Wurtzel published her memoir of depression, Prozac Nation, to astonishing literary acclaim. A cultural phenomenon by age twenty-six, she had fame, money, respecteverything she had always wanted except that one, true thing: happiness.

For all of her professional success, Wurtzel felt like a failure. She had lost friends and lovers, every magazine job she’d held, and way too much weight. She couldn’t write, and her second book was past due. But when her doctor prescribed Ritalin to help her focus-and boost the effects of her antidepressants — Wurtzel was spared. The Ritalin worked. And worked. The pills became her sugar…the sweetness in the days that have none. Soon she began grinding up the Ritalin and snorting it. Then came the cocaine, then more Ritalin, then more cocaine. Then I need more. I always need more. For all of my life I have needed more…

More, Now, Again is the brutally honest, often painful account of Wurtzel’s descent into drug addiction. It is also a love story: How Wurtzel managed to break free of her relationship with Ritalin and learned to love life, and herself, is at the heart of this ultimately uplifting memoir that no reader will soon forget.

More, Now, Again: A Memoir of Addiction

The Man Who Forgot How to Read: A Memoir

Product Description

The remarkable journey of an award-winning writer struck with a rare and devastating affliction that prevented him from reading even his own writing
One hot midsummer morning, novelist Howard Engel picked up his newspaper from his front step and discovered he could no longer read it. The letters had mysteriously jumbled themselves into something that looked like Cyrillic one moment and Korean the next. While he slept, Engel had experienced a stroke and now suffered from a rare condition called alexia sine agraphia, meaning that while he could still write, he could no longer read.
            Over the next several weeks in hospital and in rehabilitation, Engel discovered that much more was affected than his ability to read. His memory failed him, and even the names of old friends escaped his tongue. At first geography eluded him: he would know that two streets met somewhere in the city, but he couldn’t imagine where. Apples and grapefruit now looked the same. When he returned home, he had trouble remembering where things went and would routinely ?nd cans of tuna in the dishwasher and jars of pencils in the freezer.
           Despite his disabilities, Engel prepared to face his dilemma. He contacted renowned neurologist Dr. Oliver Sacks for advice and visited him in New York City, forging a lasting friendship. He bravely learned to read again. And in the face of tremendous obstacles, he triumphed in writing a new novel.
            An absorbing and uplifting story, filled with sly wit and candid insights, The Man Who Forgot How to Read will appeal to anyone fascinated by the mysteries of the mind, on and off the page.

(20080714)

The Man Who Forgot How to Read: A Memoir

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