Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Download Free Books Women I Have Known and Been Full Version

Itemize Books Concering Women I Have Known and Been

Original Title: Women I Have Known and Been
ISBN: 1882723031 (ISBN13: 9781882723034)
Edition Language: English
Download Free Books Women I Have Known and Been  Full Version
Women I Have Known and Been Hardcover | Pages: 121 pages
Rating: 4.25 | 60 Users | 8 Reviews

Rendition Toward Books Women I Have Known and Been

From http://www.clpearson.com/about_me.htm

In fourth grade, in Gusher, Utah, I won four dollars in a school district essay contest on “Why We Should Eat a Better Breakfast.” And yes, this morning I had a bowl of my own excellent granola, followed by a hike in the hills near my home in Walnut Creek, California.

In high school I began writing in earnest. I have now in my files a folder marked “Poetry, Very Bad,” and another, “Poetry, Not Quite So Bad.” Writing served a good purpose for that very dramatic, insecure adolescent. Also at that time I began to keep a diary, which I still maintain and which has been indescribably useful to me both as a writer and as a pilgrim on the earth.

After graduating from Brigham Young University with an MA in theatre, teaching for a year in Utah at Snow College, and traveling for a year, I taught part-time at BYU in the English department and was then hired by the motion picture studio on campus to write educational and religious screenplays.

While performing at the university as Mrs. Antrobus in Thornton Wilder’s “The Skin of Our Teeth,” I met and fell in love with Gerald Pearson, a shining, blond, enthusiastic young man, who fell in love with me and my poems.

“We’ve got to get them published,” he said on our honeymoon, and soon dragged me up to the big city, Salt Lake City, to see who would be first in line to publish them. “Poetry doesn’t sell,” insisted everyone we spoke to, and I, somewhat relieved, put publishing on the list of things to do posthumously.

But not Gerald. “Then I’ll publish them,” he said. Borrowing two thousand dollars, he created a company called “Trilogy Arts” and published two thousand copies of a book called Beginnings, a slim, hard-back volume with a white cover that featured a stunning illustration, “God in Embryo,” by our good friend Trevor Southey, now an internationally known artist. On the day in autumn of 1967 that Gerald delivered the books by truck to our little apartment in Provo, I was terrified. I really had wanted to do this posthumously.

Beginnings

Today
You came running
With a small specked egg
Warm in your hand.
You could barely understand,
I know,
As I told you of Beginnings–
Of egg and bird.

Told, too,
That years ago you began,
Smaller than sight.
And then,
As egg yearns for sky
And seed stretches to tree,
You became–
Like me.

Oh,
But there’s so much more.
You and I, child,
Have just begun.

Think:
Worlds from now
What might we be?–
We, who are seed
Of Deity.

We toted a package of books up to the BYU bookstore, and asked to see the book buyer. “Well,” she said, “nobody ever buys poetry, but since you’re a local person, let me take four on consignment.” As they came in packages of twenty, we persuaded her to take twenty--on consignment. Next day she called and asked, “Those books you brought up here. Do you have any more of them?”

I had anticipated that the two thousand books, now stacked in our little closet and under our bed and in my Daddy’s garage, would last us years and years as wedding presents. But immediately we ordered a second printing. Beginnings sold over 150,000 copies before we gave it to Doubleday and then to Bookcraft.

Beginnings was followed by other volumes of poetry: The Search, The Growing Season, A Widening View, I Can’t Stop Smiling, and Women I Have Known and Been. Most of the poems from the earlier books now appear in a compilation, Beginnings and Beyond. The poems have been widely reprinted in such places as Ann Landers’ column, the second volume of Chicken Soup for the Soul, and college textbooks such as Houghton Mifflin’s Structure and Meaning: an Introduction to Literature. That first little volume of verse, and my husband’s determination, laid the foundation for my entire career.

Another characteristic of my husband was to have a profound effect on both

Identify Of Books Women I Have Known and Been

Title:Women I Have Known and Been
Author:Carol Lynn Pearson
Book Format:Hardcover
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 121 pages
Published:July 1st 1993 by Gold Leaf Press (WA) (first published 1992)
Categories:Poetry. Womens. Christianity. Lds. Contemporary

Rating Of Books Women I Have Known and Been
Ratings: 4.25 From 60 Users | 8 Reviews

Notice Of Books Women I Have Known and Been
Another book of Carol Lynne Pearson poems, which I liked, but not as much as the one I bought at a garage sale last month. It makes sense. This book was from the library, so it was free. The one from the garage sale cost me $1. It should've been better. It cost me a buck.

I just love Pearson's poetry. She tackles some pretty serious issues in this volume as well. She is really able to use poetry to tell a compelling story in addition to expressing emotion.

From http://www.clpearson.com/about_me.htmIn fourth grade, in Gusher, Utah, I won four dollars in a school district essay contest on Why We Should Eat a Better Breakfast. And yes, this morning I had a bowl of my own excellent granola, followed by a hike in the hills near my home in Walnut Creek, California.In high school I began writing in earnest. I have now in my files a folder marked Poetry,Another book of Carol Lynne Pearson poems, which I liked, but not as much as the one I bought at a garage sale last month. It makes sense. This book was from the library, so it was free. The one from the garage sale cost me $1. It should've been better. It cost me a buck.

Most poetry collections have some that resonate with me and others that don't, but this was overwhelmingly filled with poems that spoke to me. I am familiar with some of Pearson's other work, but I wasn't aware of her poetry. I'm glad I found it.

I didn't realize this was a book of poems for some reason. I skimmed through and read a few. I liked them, I'm just not a big fan of poetry.



Probably every woman (especially every Mormon woman) can find something to relate to in this book. It is full of wonderful poems about the lives of women. I really appreciate Carol Lynn Pearson.

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.