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Book reviews for "Chao,_Patricia" sorted by average review score:

Managing Workplace Chaos: Solutions for Handling Information, Paper, Time, and Stress
Published in Unknown Binding by Amacom Books (E) (2002)
Author: Patricia J. Hutchings
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Good suggestions for overhauling one's work & life goals
Chapter Four of this book gives particularly meaningful ways to create positive change in one's outlook and attitude towards one's work life. This chapter has helped me step back and see the larger issues which truly affect the day to day detail of the workplace. One reading of this book is not enough as each chapter is packed with so many ideas and detailed suggestions for improving one workplace environment. I need to reread this book several times to take it all in. I plan to keep this book handy as a reference and motivator to put as many of the suggestions into practice as possible. Improving the quality of one's work-life and consequently home-life is a goal that I believe this book can help with.

Sure-fire Stress Relief!!
This book was worth so much more than money. It has taken pressure off of everyone in our office, not to mention our family members. The techniques for speed reading were worth there weight in gold, considering the ever increasing need to read faster with the flood of information we get everyday. I am personally grateful that I bought this book. I have decreased my stress level ten-fold. Thank you Patricia! for your dedication to writing such a fantastic book!

A sure fire stress cure!
My company loves this book. the management bought each of us a copy and we read it at lunchtime. we are applying many of the interruption techniques and have proposed a new work flow strategy to the management as a result of what we are learning. a must for all working people today.


This Blessed Mess: Finding Hope Amidst Life's Chaos
Published in Paperback by Sorin Books (2000)
Author: Patricia H. Livingston
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Everyday Chaos: To Life!
"This Blessed Mess" is vintage Pat Livingston. And more.

Vintage because those who know Pat, have heard her speak or have read her writing know that she is second to no one in her ability to ferret a positive kernel of truth (if not laugher) from underneath the shell of her most awful of events. She has written before about her unflagging convictions about Hope, and "finding Hope amidst life's chaos" is the sub-title of this small treasure. But this is not a repeat of earlier work. Rather, Hope is the lynchpin of her own life, so it is the touchstone she continually suggests each of us could profit from would we learn to carry it in our own pocket for those times when problems, be they "messes" or full blown "chaos", break into the otherwise orderliness and predictable regularity of our lives with splintering consequences.

Ms. Livingston admits in her Introduction that she realizes the experiences of her life of which she writes are 'far less painful' than those many other people have faced. But her experiences have convinced her that like the theory of creation-out-of-chaos, the unnerving, painful and "messy" events of our lives contain within them the human if not the chemical 'elements' with which we can make something positive and good. It is her earnest belief that we can survive the shards and shreds of exploding chaos and find in them gladness, beauty, even laugher-- and always hope.

The book has two parts. In the first part Pat addresses briefly capital-C 'Chaos', the cosmic phenomenon out of which cosmologists believe creation happened at the moment of the "Big Bang", and lower case-c 'chaos', the every-day disruptions that 'create' life for each one of us. At this precise point in time scientists at two research centers, one in the U.S. and one in Switzerland, are expending massive amounts of time and money to find more discriminating ways to recreate the conditions, and more sensitive detectors to monitor the moment(s) when Chaos became Creation, the moments in which "nothing" became "something", the 'matter' that is now 'us' and the rest of the material world: the bosons, quarks, electrons, antimatter, and atoms. Patricia Livingston turns the detector of her own uncanny 'inner eye' on some chaotic events in her life and using those stories she describes the many parallels and the Mysterious 'naturalness' she sees between the hugely complex scientific phenomenon that occurred when "Life" erupted-- the first time-- and the equally unfathomable havoc, turmoil, disconnections, breakdowns, deaths, and Death, out of which our fullness of life also can 'erupt' as we grapple to make sense of the messiest of events. She offers ways to do that grappling in Part Two.

Chaos, scientists have been able to demonstrate, is energy and power. Pat's particular gift is her ability to tell stories. Some of her stories, and it is worth saying that these are all true stories, are belly-laugh funny and some are gut-wrenchingly not funny. But all of them release both energy and power as she tells how she has used those events to piece together the fragments chaos has spewed into her life, finding in them threads of Hope and weaving, over time, a fabric strong enough for carrying on. Insights about the place for prayer, about making the sometimes-Herculean effort to stay connected with our friends, and for looking for signs that there is still an atom of life left 'out there' are all Pat's special forte. Along the way she tells us what tohu wa bohu is; why betrayal, of all things, might just be one of life's vitamins, and how to 'make' Holy Water. I don't know if that one appeals to me more because I am a Roman Catholic or because I am a chemist, but I've already told it with due and proper seriousness to a number of my friends.

Some connections between chaos and creation is what Pat Livingston has discovered in her own life and is what she uncovers beautifully, and entertainingly, for us in "This Blessed Mess". It is a book worth reading.

"Messy" but Good
Patricia Livingston was unknown to me until I encountered "This Blessed Mess" as the September selection of the Spiritual Book Associates, a rarefied and wonderful monthly book club. I'm glad I did. This author has something to say and it's worth hearing.

Livingston begins with two premises: "Life is filled with struggle. Struggle is filled with Love." In the first part of her book she explores in depth the interplay of chaos and creation in our lives. Arguing that chaos is inherent to the human condition, she underscores her point with a combination of scripture, poetry, personal experience, and scientific theory. Her connection of James Gleick's chaos theory with the patterns of our spiritual lives makes her argument striking and compelling.

In the second part, Livingston describes how to move from chaos to creation and to find blessing in struggle "as we grow in hope in God's power to bring life out of what seems to be defeat in loss." Her how-to list includes developing core beliefs, caring for ourselves, connecting with life, looking for goodness, deepening our joy, hanging in there, and praying. The chapter on "Laughing Amidst the Mess" was my favorite. Laughter not only helps us deal with mess, but messy situations often teach us to to laugh at ourselves. For Livingston, merriment contains the "energy of creation." I agree.


Monkey King
Published in Hardcover by HarperCollins (1900)
Author: Patricia Chao
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Penetrating Indictment of Chinese Patriachy
Although I'm a journalist, I rarely read fiction books because I could never rouse myself to be interested in other people's life stories. I only picked up this book without ever having heard of the author or the title, because it was at a $2 book sale. How wonderful to be stunned by such talent! One of those books that are so superbly written that it flashes right before your eyes like a film; indeed, it would make an excellent film about Asian American culture, considerably less saccharine than Amy Tan's "Joy Luck Club"; far more modern, hard-hitting, gritty, about the monstrous tumor of misogyny that lurks within even modern Chinese patriarchies. Chao makes me realize that in any culture that devalues women, the ancient taboos of incest disappear since a female child is not even regarded as a human being, let alone one's own flesh and blood. An important book for those who care about and wish to penetrate into Chinese culture and mentality. I read it straight from midnight to 6 in the morning and had the worst nightmares...

Superb writing about a difficult subject
One of the most difficult things to portray in fiction has to be the disintegration of the self, as occurs in mental illness. Patricia Chao succeeds in telling a story through the eyes of one suffering a lengthy nervous breakdown, while at the same time rendering wonderful characterizations of the protagonist's Chinese-American family. While most of the writing is fairly straightforward, there are some really beautiful passages that verge on the poetic, without overdoing it.

Unlike much of the new wave of Asian-American literature, this book transcends the simple new-immigrant-in-America ground that can make this genre one-dimensional. And despite the grim subject matter, the book rises above the usual "downer" mood of most novels discussing mental illness, child abuse, etc. -- it is not sociology, it is art.

When incest and other tragedies occur, it is very easy to point the finger at someone. This book to me was ultimately compassionate and uplifting because it presented the problem within a portrait of full human complexity. I won't give away the ending but I will say it was very moving. I would love to see this story as a film.

A magnificient book, one of the best debut novels I've seen.
This is one of the two most powerful "first novels" I've ever read (the other one being David Leavitt's "Family Dancing"), by an author amazingly wise and insightful for her years.

This is, in my perception, a fictionalized account of Ms. Chao's own life. That was my sense, in any case. As painful as the material is, I found her approach to be incredibly non-self-pitying, and amazingly non-melodramatic. The power of the experiences in this novel are woven brilliantly with language that has exceptional clarity.

This incredibly gifted author spins word images so well and so effortlessly that I hardly noticed I was reading. It was as if I were watching the story unfold before my eyes. There is not one character in this novel who is not fully developed; I felt I knew each one intimately.

I am aware of how maudlin this type of book could potentially be, but Chao never, not once, lets herself slip into that. I admire the fact that Chao lets the ambiguity of where, precisely, Sally's life will go after the book ends, exist....she doesn't need to have a tidy "happy ending." And in life, how many of us do have a neatly-wrapped happy ending? Most of us are a work in progress, just as Chao so brilliantly portrays Sally.

Rarely has a book had so much impact for me. I was entranced and hook on the first sentence.


Chaos & Serenity
Published in Audio Cassette by Benesserra Publishing (06 June, 1997)
Author: Patricia Bacall
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Dancing With Chaos
Published in Paperback by Salmon Poetry (2003)
Author: Patricia Monaghan
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Global City Review: Fish Out of Water
Published in Paperback by Global City Pr (2000)
Authors: Patricia Chao, Jennifer Coke, Karen De Balbian-Verster, and City Global
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