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I laughed and cried as I read your beautiful book. I keep it out on a table and often pick it up and go through it again and again. Your words go right to my heart.
Thank you for this wonderful tribute to a very special dog.
Bunter's final days are poignant and moving. All in all, this is a lovely book sure to interest all those who have loved a pet.
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Mr. Darcy turns into a softened form of Captain Wentworth, ready to marry or rather - in this day and age - shack up with anybody who takes his fancy and who has an opinion of that is entirely her own.
Bridget stands by and watches, and, like Anne, is accosted by small children, keeps her head in a crisis, observes the blind love of Darcy's parents for one another, endures with pleasure how Darcy's father cannot remember women's first names, has a terrible fright when she thinks Darcy is married to someone else, receives a letter and watches as an injured woman falls in love with Benwick over books. Not quite the poetry that Jane Austen had in mind though, but more up-to-date literature. At the end she knows it is time to make choices of her own...
Towards the end the story takes a turn that stretches belief a little bit, but the last chapters make everything OK again.
This book makes quite enjoyable reading.
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Stifter is different from any other writer of the 19th century. His main interest is not in dramatic events but the everyday. Ordinary lives fill him with wonder and admiration. He will make you look at life in a different way.
Kafka once wrote that we should read only those books which can be "the axe for the frozen sea inside us." Stifter's "Brigitta" is definitely one such book.
I encountered this story several years ago in an undergraduate survey course on German literature. The elegance and beauty of this narrative masterpiece were immediately obvious to me. Anyone jaded about the worthiness of literature ought to at least read the opening pragraph of "Brigitta." It's one of the most astonishing to found and initiates the reader directly into the world this writer so touchingly describes. This story (along with other works by Mann and Kafka)inspired me to major in German. I've recommended it over the years to many good friends, all of whom shared my admiration of "Brigitta's" considerable merit. What a pity that Stifter and his works are not better known to American readers.
It's perhaps an uncomfortable truth that Stifter's deep concern with _goodness_, its fragility and easily corruptible nature - especially during childhood - may strike many among today's literary "school of resentment" as sanctimonious and, dare I say, offensive. I would also hazard to guess that Stifter's reception among a more mainstream literary public is hampered by his having come from the German-speaking orbit.
The clear, sweet prose makes delivery of the content easy, and the very fine, soft illustrations demand repeated veiwing. My Preschool and Kindergarten ESL students found it highly engaging.
If there's a better science and read-aloud book around I'd really like to know about it. TEN stars.
Follow this book up with the superb "Is a Blue Whale the Biggest Thing There Is?" by Robert E. Wells. Wells' book uses the whales' size as a starting point for exploring the size of the universe and other very big things (the second step involves putting a hundred blue whales in a really big jar). Read my review of Wells' book if you like.