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The book is thoroughly referenced and full of surprises. I say get this book and read it over a cup of your favorite java.
A coffee lover, NYC, NY
thinner and happier, and that it can do so with complete safety. It's amazing how many things I found out about the drug that I and most of humanity use every day.
I spend about half my time on the road, much of it eating poorly (and drinking bad coffee!) in planes, airports and hotels, so I was particularly interested in the chapters on using caffeine to lose weight, fight jet lag and battle the common cold, not to mention the ones on how caffeine can raise my IQ (too late for that, I fear) and help me fight the common cold. The most important thing I took away from the book is that I can forget my caffeine guilt trip and actually enjoy something that's good for me. All the advantages and benefits of sensible use of caffeine highlighted in the book are backed up with academic and medical studies, so I'm quite disposed to trust the authors and follow their recommendations.
Last year I was given another book by the same team, "The World of Caffeine: The Science and Culture of the World's Most Popular Drug", which won some prizes and was a great read. This new book I paid for myself, and I must say it's proving its value every day.
Coffee lover in NYC, NY
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In subsequent years Miss S.'s highly individual sense of upward mobility would find expression, and there would be replacement vans. Miss S. was a Catholic who loved to paint her vans and favored yellow - asserting "it's the papal colour." She was sometimes demanding of Bennett's time, requesting favors and errands of him. She never said "Thanks." She revealed precious little about her past: only of her current opinions. She wrote and sold pamphlets on the street that she claimed were authored anonymously. She sold pencils on the street, claiming that her pencils were the best. She was given to fanatical religious and political pronouncements, and outrageous statements of prejudice and some silliness. Her right-wing politics clashed with Bennett's, and her comments on current events - reported deadpan, and verbatim - were often very funny. Old age and its freight of health and personal problems dogged her, and Bennett did what he could to help.
Alan Bennett is a great listener. In addition he can tell a story simply and clearly, with precision and understatement. He tells just enough. He encourages his characters to speak for themselves.
This is a great little nonfiction story that is tender but never mawkish - told with wit and elegance.
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I particularly liked the way the author honored his hero, Steve Sax, the once baseball great, to help overcome the horrible memories of child abuse.
Not only is this book an exceptional tool for those wishing to reconstruct their abused psyche; but to all parents on planet Earth, who ever said a mean word to their child.
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Ya gotta get this book!
What! you say.
Well, I bought it a while back, and I never sat down to read it. So yesterday I just grabbed it, and started reading---and despite the fact that it's meant for children, the insight it offers is unparalleled. Maybe some of you have read "The Tao of Pooh" (which I read in high school). That book explains how Winnie the Pooh behaves in a Taoist fashion. But instead of reading the "Tao" book, I think people could have done just as well, if not better, reading the original work.
I have great respect for an author who can write a work that appeals to both children and adults. Such is "The Phantom Tollbooth" or "The Wizard of Oz." Such is "Winnie The Pooh." The joy of reading Winnie is the absurd logic it follows. Or the way it satirizes adults, which it does quite well through the characters of Eeyore and Owl. For example, how can you NOT enjoy this passage from Chapter Four:
"The old grey donkey, Eeyore, stood by himself in a thirsty corner of the forest, his front feet well apart, his head on one side, and thought about things. Sometimes he thought sadly to himself, 'Why?' and sometimes he thought, 'Wherefore?' and sometimes he thought, 'Inasmuch as which?'---and sometimes he didn't quite know what he was thinking about."
Now the only decision that remains is do I read the other Pooh book I bought, "The House at Pooh Corner" or do I read F. Scott Fitzgerald's "The Great Gatsby." Hmm.
Bennett's character sketches in Talking Heads are devastating. The grown man whose safe little existence begins to unravel as he discovers his dear old mum has taken a lover, the vigilent, upright busybody who ends up in prison for invading her neighbor's privacy, the widow of "Soldiering On" whose emptiness of purpose is revealed through her inability to grieve--each uncomprehending character Bennett has created in these astonishing soliloquies is undone by his or her brave and steadfast unwillingness to acknowledge the bare-knuckled truth of human emotion.
Bennett is not cruel in revealing the weaknesses of his characters, but he is uncompromising in revealing those weaknesses. This is the Teddy Bear who brings to the picnic the sharp knives that cut through the bread and fat prepared and packaged by his companions.
Also recommended are Bennett's Writing Home, The Clothes They Stood Up In, and any and all of his other plays, particularly The Old Country; and, for those who just must have the soft and fuzzy version of the Teddy Bear, listen to Bennett's reading of Winnie the Pooh, or go see his stageplay of The Wind in the Willows.