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Books and Music for Adults
Non-Fiction
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Emergence
Labeled Autistic
Temple Grandin
Softbound
$12.95
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Temple Grandin's story is as miraculous and inspiring as that of Helen Keller. Mainly through her own determination
and with the help of some very loving and insightful adults along the way, she discovered ways to free her
self from the chains of autism and then went on to find ways to allow the special gifts of autism to be placed
in service of the world. What we can learn from her is a lot.
As a child, she longed for affection, but because she was terrified of human contact and easily overstimulated,
she became increasingly isolated instead. She also suffered from extreme anxiety attacks and was truly a
prisoner of her autistic constitution.
Because she was also acutely observant and had a real understanding for the animals in her life (farm animals
as well as pets), she was able to equate the responses of those animals to her own feelings and then to find
ways to help herself out of the anxiety attack syndrome. And from there, her work both as a developer of
effective autistic therapies and as a an animal scientist blossomed. As an adult, she is regarded as one
of the most gifted animal scientist, and one of the highest functioning autistic individuals in the world.
Here story is remarkable: it teaches us as much about what it means to be human as it teaches about autism
and its potentials. I just love this book.
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A Child's Christmas
in Wales
Dylan Thomas
Illustrated by Edward Ardizzone
Softbound
$9.95 |
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What to say about this great tale of Christmas
with Aunts in the kitchen and Uncles in the parlor, of snowballs
and cats, fires and dinner gongs, and the myriad other adventures
available to a wide-eyed child in snowy, Christmas-y Wales?
Actually, I don't know quite what to say, other than if you
haven't read it yet, do. You'll love it. If you have read
it, well, do read it again -- it is too jam-packed with delight
and love not to go back to at least once a year, especially
at Christmas time.
This edition is the one with the very best, right-on-target
illustrations, just right for the story and just
lovely on their own.
As an invitation for more fun (and to remind those
who've read it why it's such
a frolic), here's the opening page:
One Christmas was so much like another, in those
years around the sea-town corner now and out of
all sound except the distant speaking of the voices
I sometimes hear a moment before sleep, that I
can never remember whether it snowed for six days
and six nights when I was twelve or whether it
snowed for twelve days and twelve nights when I
was six.
All the Christmases roll down toward the two-tongued
sea, like a cold and headlong moon bundling down
the sky that was our street; and they stop at the
rim of the ice-edged, fish-freezing waves, and
I plunge my hands in the snow and bring out whatever
I can find. In goes my hand into that wool-white
bell-tongued ball of holidays resting at the rim
of the carol-singing sea, and out come Mrs. Prothero
and the firemen.
Have a wonderful Christmas! |
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Dante to Dead
Man Walking
One Reader's Journey through the Christian Classics
Raymond A. Schroth, S.J.
Softbound
$14.95
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My definition of spiritual is broad. The books
that follow are spiritual classics in that, with the exception
of a few published within the last decade, they have worked
their magic on centuries and generations of readers. They
speak to the human spirit, to that divine gift by which
we transcend the limitations imposed by our self-absorption,
our narrow-mindedness and our moral cowardice. If we approach
a book in the way Karl Rahner says we should approach life
- fully open to human experience and God's grace - it can
transform us in much the same way that a friend, a teacher,
or a coach can help us become something we have not been
before.
- from the author's Introduction
Reading this book is liking taking a guided
tour of some of the greatest works of literature Western
Civilization has produced. And having a guide who
is expert beyond any reasonable expectation!
There are 50 essays covering 50 authors or
works - a sampling of those discussed ranges from The Book
of Genesis to Dante Alighieri to Dostoyevsky, James Joyce,
Willa Cather, Evelyn Waugh, Edward Steichen, C. S. Lewis,
Flannery O'Connor, Shusaku Endo. Of course, there are many
more. Schroth's essays go right to the heart of the matter
-- what is it about the subject that is exciting, that keeps
the author and his/her work alive in our hearts, that moves
us forward as we read?
If you like literature, you'll love this book!
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Teresa of Avila
The Progress of a Soul
Cathleen Medwick
Softbound
$12.95
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This biography has become one of my favorite books - I have
read it more than once and given it to many people since
first finding. Unfortunately, it found its way to the bottom
of my "books to upload" pile, so I am only now
getting it to you. I can almost hear Teresa saying, "Finally!
Now let's get on with it!"
Medwick's retelling of St. Teresa of Avila's life is almost
always from the perspective of how Teresa herself would have
seen (or has written that she did see) the events around
her. I love this, as it offers the utlimate in both historical
accuracy and respect toward a very great woman who wove beatiful
pathways toward salvation into a fabric of Western Civilization.
Additionally, the author's penning of the story itself has
the readability of a good novel even as it conveys a mindset
and circumstances that, outwardly at least, are so very different
from what we commonly encounter in the modern world. I feel
that Teresa is a woman for our time as much as she was a
woman for her own time - and that this biography offers one
of the best portraits of this person who we can all benefit
by knowing better.
Here's a glimpse of what you will find between the covers
of this book:
From the time Teresa of Avila (1515-1582) entered a convent
at the age of sixteen, she exhibited an independence of spirit
not readily tolerated by the sixteenth-century Church or
the sixteenth-century political community. Her expansive
nature, intensity, and energy would fuel a lifetime of accomplishment,
including most significantly the reform of Carmelite convents
and the writing of a body of work that today is considered
the cornerstone of Christian mysticism. In a finely wrought,
multidimensional portrait of Teresa, Cathleen Medwick brings
to life a woman of very human contradictions: a devoted daughter
of the Church who bent the ruls - and barely survived the
Spanish Inquisition - to achieve her goals; a practical,
no-nonsense manager whose very personal brand of spirituality
manifested itself in flamboyant, arguably erotic, raptures;
a woman who, despite debilitating illness, traveled around
Spain with the assurance (if not the authority) of a man
to organize and strengthen Carmelite communities.
There is much more that could be added, but you'll have
more fun if I don't tell you every little thing. Do enjoy
- this is truly a book for the heart.
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Against the Pollution of the I
Selected Writings of
Jacques Lusseyran
Hardbound, Dust Jacket
$18.95
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With strength, clarity, beauty, and grace, Jacques Lusseyran
describes regions of the heart entered only by the most
courageous. We learn of the extraordinary capacities of
sensing, of the inner light of spiritual attention, and
an ever-present depth of joy that cannot be taken away either
by blindness or by the threat of death - such is the tenacity
of love. I have never been quite somoved by a book. Thanks
to this writing, this exquisite language, this gifted imagination,
we know what we are supposed to be and become as human;
he has shown us by his life.
Robert Sardello, Ph.D
This collection of six little-known essays and lectures is
filled with the inner light that Jacques Lusseyran found after
losing his sight at the age of eight. This light - the universal
and Divine source of faith and hope - sustained not only Lusseyran
but also his fellow inmates in the Nazi prison camp of Buchenwald,
as two of the essays describe. Despite the constraints of
blindness in daily life and society's inevitable prejudices,
Lusseyran felt - and makes us feel - that our disabilities,
whatever they may be, are in truth our most precious gifts.
Blindness enabled Lusseyran to discover aspects of the world
that he would never have otherwise known. He vividly describes
many senses beyond our usual five - available to all of us
if only we pay attention. In these essays, Lusseyran reaches
out compassionately to all people and urges a dialogue between
those with and without eyes.
It is our inner light that Lusseyran refers to as the I in
the title essay. He declares that the I's central vitality
is under attack by everything that steals our attention away
from it and does not revere it. His love for humanity compels
him to declare the I in desperate need of protection. With
this remarkable collection of essays, Lusseyran offers a way
to unveil the light-filled inner I and transform our lives.
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Book of the Heart
The Poetics, Letters, and Life of John Keats
Andrés Rodríguez
Softbound
$16.95
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Keats stands as a prophetic precursor behind much in today's
radical attempts at cultural and self-transformation. Unfortunately,
he is remembered, if at all, mostly as a Romantic poet whose
value and standing was magnified by his early death. Eclipsed
by the lushly sensuous affection of his poems, the real meaning
of his life and the greatness of his achievement in poetics
- how one makes sense out of experience - has been ignored.
Now Andrés Rodríguez redresses the balance
by granting to Keats' Letters their huge intellectual and
spiritual labor. In these Letters, among the most inspiring
spiritual documents of the West, we see the poet forming and
transforming a passionate life of great joys and sorrows into
a self of imagination and power.
Book of the Heart gives the Letters the central
place in our literature they deserve. This is a book--for
all kinds of readers--about the power of the life of imagination.
-Robert Hass
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Sacred Places
A Spiritual Science Insight on the 4th Estate - The Mineral
Earth
Alan Whitehead
Softbound
$22.95
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This is a fascinating study of myth, legend, geography, minerology,
and the weather! Alan Whitehead, who lives in the area of
Sydney, Australia, takes a close look at our visible Earth,
then dives into Aboriginal and world mythology and cosmology
to emerge with insights esoteric and exoteric, questions,
and a basket of facts that will keep you happily reading (and
chuckling! - this is also one of Alan's more humorous offerings)
as you learn and wonder about the planet upon which we make
our homes. Alan has succeeded in writing a book that is at
once a great rainy-day read and a really valuable resource.
I'm confident you'll enjoy it as much as I did!
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In a Sunburned Country
Bill Bryson
Softbound
$14.95
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My mother sent me this book after she had finished reading
it. The timing was perfect as I was just poking around for
something new to read. As I read, Bob became so intrigued
by the eruptions of laughter coming from my side of the bed
that he read it after I had finished. Then, it was my turn
to lose sleep listening to him chortle . . . repeatedly.
When he was done, I sent the book to Alan and Susan Whitehead
in Sydney, Australia - wanting to share the laughs and also
make sure that a native Australian would find nothing offensive
or just plain wrong. They loved it, though Alan reported being
glad to hand the book on to their son (now grown and living
elsewhere), as he found it hard to get any work done above
Susan's laughter. (Susan submitted no report of what Alan's
guffaws had cost her).
And so, I pass this along to you - this is one of the funniest
travel books in print, as well as being one of the most humanly
insightful accounts of a remarkable land. Australia is a country
that is also a continent, that abounds with friendly people,
extremely hot, dry weather, and the largest gathering of lethal
(really lethal) wildlife to be found anywhere on our
dear planet. Bill Bryson's love of the place, and his wonderful
sense of humor, combine to make this one of the best books
anyone could read, anywhere. You'll have great fun with this
one! Enjoy!!!
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Sacred Places/Sunburned Country Special
Allan Whitehead
Bill Bryson
Softbound
Regular Price - $37.90
Set Price: $35.00
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These two books are a great read back to back - doubles both
the pleasure and the insight!
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Looking for Mary
or, The Blessed Mother and Me
The Remarkable Story of One Woman's Stumble from Darkness
into Light
Beverly Donofrio
Softbound
$14.00
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This is the best true story I have read in years and years.
Beverly Donofrio, author of Riding in Cars with Boys,
tells her story with openness, good will, humor and, finally,
love - the sort of love that sets real-life miracles in motion
and transforms lives. She begins her tale as the well-loved
daughter of a good Catholic family who ends her high school
career as "the girl who got pregnant." In the course
of raising their young son, her husband develops a drug habit
of nasty proportions, which leads to divorce, which leads
her into a life as bohemian-academic-single-mom and a series
of relationships with men which, if they aren't totally disasterous,
are nipped in full bloom . . . by her. And I haven't even
mentioned what happens to her son.
One day a garage-sale picture of Mary sneaks into her life
along with a full-hearted neighbor who teaches her to garden.
As is Mary's way, first in small, almost unnoticable ways,
Beverly's life begins to change. And then, in some pretty
dramatic ways. From Los Angeles to Medjugore to Guadalupe's
Mexico, Beverly's journey of the heart, her reunion with the
Blessed Mother is a no-holds-barred snapshot of all our lives
- and of the promise they all hold. Read this book - you'll
love it!
* * * * *
As an aside, I have spent the last year or so actively looking
for a statue of Mary that I thought was artistic, spiritually
inspired, and beautiful. (When you read this book, you'll
see why it's appropriate that I mention this here.) It's not
an easy task. Although beautiful statues of Kwan Yin are available
on what seems like every street corner (which is fine with
me - I really like them), there is an amazing lack of grace
in most available sculpted images of Mary. I still don't understand
that phenomenon, but I can share with you one series of statues
that I've found that are truly inspired. Go to www.inspirationsbymicco.com
and click on Window Shopping to see them. My favorite
is Our Lady of Grace, but each of the 5 aspects of Mary has
it's own very special beauty. Sam Micco is the very gifted
designer of these beautiful statues - I spoke with him and
he told me his story, which he has posted as part of his web
site - it is well worth reading.
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The Awakened One
A Life of Buddha
Sherab Chodzin Kohn
$14.95
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I am amazed by this book and what it's author has accomplished.
Although I have not exhausted the available literature
on
the life of Buddha, I have read quite a bit and so far have
seen nothing that rivals the rare combination of impeccable
research and fluid storytelling. The Awakened One reads
like a novel (a very good novel), yet every detail is based
on accurate research and deep understanding. In a lesser
writer's hand, the attempt to reach such a goal would have
resulted
in either a stodgy, academic treatise or what I have come
to call an "intellectual-lite" story - something
"accessible," but too breezy and vapid to be worth
the undertaking. Instead, The Awakened One is biography
at its best - a beautifully told story of a life we all
want
to know about; it is also teaching at its best. Buddha's
principal doctrines are presented in a way that is not
only clear and
succinct, but that enables the reader to understand them
not as abstract doctrine, but as insights which were themselves
events in the life of the Buddha.
Whether you are looking for more understanding of Buddha
and his teachings, or whether you simply want to sit by the
fire and enjoy a good book, you'll love The Awakened One.
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Bones of the Master
A Buddhist Monk's Search for the Lost Heart of China
George Crane
Softbound
$17.00
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I
read an excerpt of Bones of the Master in the Spring
2000 issue of Tricycle. It knocked my socks off - such
beauty, such writing, what a story! Without even bothering
to question, I ordered a copy the very next day. Then I proceeded
to read it as though it were food and I were starving. It
filled me completely.
Bones
of the Master is
a true story about a Ch'an (Chinese Zen) Buddhist Master,
Tsung Tsai, then living in upstate New York. At the age of
72, Tsung Tsai determined to return to China - from which
he had escaped during the Great Leap Forward in 1959. His
purpose was to find the bones of his beloved Master, rebury
them with proper Buddhist rites, and create a shrine in his
master's memory. He selects as his traveling partner his neighbor
and "heart friend," George Crane, the author of
the book. Crane's life up to that point had as little to do
with the renunciation of desire as Tsung Tsai's had to do
with its cultivation - the way they weave their worlds together
is as much an adventure as their remarkable trek into the
mountains of Inner Mongolia to carry out their unlikely task.
The Truth that Tsung Tsai shares with us along the way is
as powerfully transforming as it is beautiful and wise.
Bones
of the Master is
so valuable on so many levels that I am joyous to offer it
to you!
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Thinking in Pictures
and other reports from my life with autism
Temple Grandin, Ph.D.
$13.95
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Prepare for an incredible journey into the workings of the
human mind - both normal and abnormal. Temple Grandin, a Ph.D.
animal researcher who is also autistic, has gifted us all
with an intimate "insiders account" of autism. You
will learn more about the nature of this syndrome and of the
workings of your own mind from this account than you could
from any collection of theoretical reports. Further, because
Temple is also a consummate scientist, her report is filled
with the latest discoveries about the neurological basis of
autism and about what therapies have been found to work
and for whom they are effective. This is a great book that
is certain to help anyone working with any special human needs.
Outstanding!
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A Bridge of Dreams
The Story of Paramananda, a Modern Mystic, and His Ideal
of All-Conquering Love
Sara Ann Levinsky
Regular price $12.95
Forever Special price $11.00
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This is one of the most wonderful biographies ever written
about one of the most exemplary people to have ever walked
the Earth. It is a beautifully written book about a man with
an extraordinary destiny and a love-inspired soul. The man
who became Swami Paramananda was someone whose soul was so
fully permeated by the living impulse of Love that even through
the pages of a book written forty-four years after his death
by someone who never met him, he is able to reach out and
touch our hearts. We believe this book has so much to offer
to modern spiritual seekers that we will continue to discount
the price in the hopes that, as the book finds its way into
more homes, its message will find its way into more hearts.
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A Beginner's Guide
to Constructing the Universe
The Mathematical Archetypes of Nature, Art & Science
Michael S. Schneider
Softbound
$18.95
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Looking for ways to share the glorious beauty of mathematics
with your students? Or to inspire yourself with the wonder of creation?
This is your book.
Michael Schneider leads us on a spectacular, lavishly illustrated
journey along the numbers one through ten to explore the
mathematical principles made visible in flowers, shells,
crystals, plants, and the human body, expressed in the symbolic
language of folk sayings and fairy tales, myth and religion,
art and architecture. Here is a comprehensive guide to the
patterns that recur throughout the universe and underlie
human affairs.
Among the many things you will see and learn are:
- Why cans, pizza, and manhole covers are round.
- Why one and two weren't considered numbers by the ancient
Greeks.
- Why squares show up so often in goddess art and board
games.
- What property makes the spiral the most widespread shape
in nature, from embryos and hair curls to hurricanes and
galaxies.
- How the human body shares the design of a bean plant
and the solar system.
- How a snowflake is like Stonehenge, and a beehive like
a calendar.
- How our ten fingers hold the secrets of both a lobster
and a cathedral.
And there's much, much more. This is a resource you'll turn
to again and again - a dazzling revelation of the beauty
of creation.
Note: you may also want to read The Power of Limits - another
breathtaking exploration of the numeric relationships that
underlie the beauty in all things.
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The Power of Limits
Proportional Harmonies in Nature, Art, and Architecture
György Doczi
$24.95
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image size deceptive - actually an oversize trade paperback
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The Power of Limits (finally back in print!) is an
exposition of the rhythms and harmonies of both natural and
artistic forms. I have used its contents for meditative contemplation
for many years now, and have not come even close to exhausting
the insights and revelations Doczi's remarkable book contains.
Whenever I get frustrated at how slowly postive change comes
about, I reach for The Power of Limits so that I can
be reminded of the grace and beauty that limitation
brings the world. Steiner defined art as "the impress of the
spirit upon matter." Doczi shows us what that means.
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