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Dora Lee Kelleher and her younger sister were lucky to be blessed with wonderful grandparents like Clyde and Mae Bryon, who came to their rescue and adopted the two little girls shortly thereafter.
A wonderful life on the farm still couldn't remove the heartache of missing her mother, or the memories of an abusive life with both parents. To make matters even worse, Dora suffered great physical abuse by her father's hand just shortly after the adoption proceedings were finalized. Being slammed against a car that would cause a deep head laceration and knocking out her teeth, Dora grew up with this memory of her father. It wasn't the first time the child had suffered from her father's abuse.
Grandpa Byron was a strict and righteous man who had failed with his own daughter and was hell bent not to fail with his two grand daughters. After the adoption, he forbid any visitation rights to Dora's mother. He adored his two little girls.
Living on the farm introduced Dora to her childhood sweetheart, who later turned out to be the love of her life, soul mate, best friend, and of course, her husband. I would have to say Lee Becker was definitely my hero in this heartbreaking story. For a woman to find such a man to love her as Lee loved Dora, she would have to know that God had truly given her the finest gift a woman could have...how very fortunate Dora was.
Being reunited with her mother ten years later wasn't easy for Dora. Learning her mother had recently been treated for ovarian cancer, Dora has to make up her mind whether she can come to grips with forgetting the past and forgiving her mother; which is something her younger sister couldn't do.
I think it was the ending of this story that really got to me, ...
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One comes away from Byron Farwell's huge book on 19th century warfare* with the rather dismal reflection that there was not one single day in those one hundred years when wars small or large were not being waged somewhere on the globe and thousands of people were being killed daily--often with barbarism. The soldiers, naturally, did the rough work, but civilian inventors and technicians toiled tirelessly behind the scenes to invent and manufacture ever more efficient and cost-effective ways to kill people. Far from the firing lines, politicians fomented wars. Very many of those wars were instigated for asinine reasons.
Ambitiously, Farwell paints his huge canvas for both the scholar and the general reader of military history. It is, he says, a tale of wars, revolutions, battles, sieges, spies, soldiers, technical military terms, weapons, armies, military awards, camp followers and other aspects of 19th century wars and military life. Nor does he neglect that other factor that caused more deaths than all the weapons combined: diseases, including venereal disease which filled the military hospitals.
The book takes us into a far different world to today's high-tech warfare, sketching feats of almost unbelievable courage, stoicism and unshakeable devotion to duty. There was, for example, Henry Havelock (1795-1857) who, learning of the massacre of the garrison at Cawnpore in India led 2,000 infantry, some volunteer cavalry and six guns to defeat the rebels. By forced marches at the hottest time of the year he traversed 126 miles in nine days (14 miles a day through rough country for redcoats carrying heavy kit).
Defeating a rebel force, he entered Cawnpore and then--despite dwindling ammunition and supplies and a plague of cholera and dysentery that was killing off many of his men--he marched on to try to relieve the beseiged Lucknow, defeating two forces of mutineers on the way.
In an armchair, it is comfortable to read about all this, but it requires little imagination to envision what Havelock and his soldiers must have endured--driven on by their sense of duty, their faith in the British Raj and the iron discipline of the army.
Farwell (sadly, he died several years ago) was a veteran military historian, author of more than a dozen histories and a notable biography of Stonewall Jackson. Former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher is one of his many fans. Much of his success is due to his eye for the odd or quixotic, which makes this book more readable than most other encyclopedias.
At random, then, we learn that:
#A U.S. marine called Jonathan Goble, stationed in China, in 1855 invented the rickshaw;
#The British office of "Gold Stick in Waiting" goes back to 1678 (the author is adept at describing orders of chivalry and ceremonial posts);
#The notorious Nazi "Goose Step" straight-legged, stiff-kneed march (George Orwell called it "one of the most horrible sights in the world") derived from a drill in which recruits were taught balance by standing on one leg and swinging the other backward and forward;
A thousand other such intriguing factoids sprinkle this book like confetti. Farwell's disquisition, for example, on the somewhat odd preoccupation of all armies throughout history with the hairstyles of soldiers and officers alike is a masterpiece of dry humor.
Nor does Farwell shrink from the ugly side of war--noting, for example, with considerable imagery, that at the conclusion of the Siege of Verona in the Peninsular War on 11 December 1809 "some 3,000 walking skeletons surrendered."
The real joy of this book, though, is in the arcania. How the dickens did Farwell find out so much about the Ghost Dance of the Oglala Sioux? Or the story of Rollo Gillespie, a small man who assailed in his quarters one night in the West Indies by a gang of desperados grabbed his sword and killed six of them. Word of the feat preceded him to England, where, some years later, upon being presented to King George III at a levee, the royal personage remarked: "Eh, eh? What, what! Is this the little man that killed the brigands?" One might almost be in the room with the dotty monarch and the little man.
And always, like the sun about to break through the thunderclouds of war, lurks Farwell's characteristic dry humor. Of one British officer he writes: "He was a decisive man, perhaps too decisive. One of his colleagues spoke of 'One of those long conferences he held on grave issues. They generally lasted from two to five minutes'."
Lord knows how long it is, but at 900 pages the encyclopedia can scarcely be less than half a million words. Such books are not intended for narrative reading, but a daily dip into this one will invariably reward the readers with some quixotic, historical or amusing anecdote. The U.S. military could do a lot worse than to issue a copy to all ranks.
All in all, the book is an extraordinary display of erudition and of awesome industry. In no small way, it is Byron Farwell's monument.
But this reviewer's favorite entry is on the "Gunner's Chant." Explains Farwell:
"Sometimes called the gunner's doxology. Before watches became common, this was a chant used by artillery noncommissioned officers when firing salutes in order to time the intervals between rounds and keep them uniform. It began:
"Fire!
If I had good sense I wouldn't be here.
Fire!
I'd like to slip off for a pail of beer.
Fire!"
--------
*The Encyclopedia of Nineteenth-Century Land Warfare by Byron Farwell. W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., New York. ISBN 0-393-04770-9. [$]
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Jesuit Saturdays reads easily and I was anxious to keep turning to the next page to learn another gem of wisdom from Fr. Byron. I overwhelmingly recommend this book to anyone who wants to plant the first seed or nourish his or her on-going spirituality and perhaps learn better what God's will for her/him is.
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His life story details his progress towards creating THE TOOL in a scientific manner.. hypothosis followed by experiment leading to conclusion. Definetely recommended reading for anybody willing to stretch the bounds of healing and reality manifestation.
The Dover Thrift Editions are surprisingly well-constructed - they'll outlast, say, your Oxford World Classics paperbacks - and the poems are usually well-chosen. And they're....cheap!
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Most of what is said in this book is probably second nature to the experienced chess player. What you get is a short and good introduction to the "nuts and bolts" of chess. The interested novice chess player would probably be able to figure out most of what is said here on his own, or pick it up from fellow players. However, spending an afternoon reading this book, and perhaps a couple of afternoons solving the exercises, may very well be the best investment in terms of progress for spent time and effort, the novice chess player will ever make.
It will bring tears to your eyes. Wonderfully written where feelings are descriptive and real. You begin to feel that you are Dorie and you are living with her.
I commend Ms Beanblossom for her beautiful writing style and a story that will change you forever.