Steve McCurry: On Reading
Book
A celebration of the timeless act of reading - as seen through the lens of one of the world’s most...
Travel photography
A Prayer for World Peace
Book
A universal message of hope and serenity among all of Earth's inhabitants Jane Goodall is a...
Assassin's Creed: Unity
Book
1789: The magnificent city of Paris sees the dawn of the French Revolution. The cobblestone streets...
Corsica: The Recipes
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A sumptuous book exploring the incredible food of France's sunny island of Corsica. This beautifully...
Forgotten Fitzgerald: Echoes of a Lost America
F. Scott Fitzgerald and Sarah Churchwell
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While F. Scott Fitzgerald was writing the novels we remember him for today, he was also publishing...
The Fortunes of Indigo Sky
Book
I suddenly see where I'm standing, and that's at the edge of change - really, really big change. ...
Bookapotamus (289 KP) rated The Possibility of Everything in Books
May 25, 2018
Hope writes a lot of Mommy books.. which I unfortunately do not relate to - so there is push and pull of my interests here.. but I find that it just brings my curiosity out when that happens. She writes in this one, a memoir, about a journey, to take her 3-year-old daughter Maya on a “journey of faith” because she is convinced her daughters imaginary friend “Dodo” is evil. Already I’m wanting to know more.
Her and her husband take her to a shaman in Belize who practices Mayan healing arts. Her journey is rich with Belizean culture and I imagine myself back in the beautiful surroundings with nostalgia. The beautiful people, the rich history - it’s all described so colorfully.
Her book is mostly nostalgia as well, as it’s written about 10 years after the fact. “In Belize, there is a greater sense of connection to other people. It was a tremendous relief to be in a culture where people treat the spiritual dimension quite practically. This gave me the clarity I felt lacking in my life.” I love this quote, and the strength behind it. Belize just has that effect on your soul.
I wonder what I would have done in this situation. I don’t know if I would have ever taken it to this extreme, but again, not a mother. And I imagine the family structure can suffer under such circumstances as hers does with Uzi. She’s doing the best she can, but it’s hard to read the of struggles families got though when a child is “ill.”
I’m glad I read this - it was interesting, and colorful, and I found myself enthralled just waiting to find out what would happen, and if Maya would get “better."
Growing Up Working Class: Hidden Injuries and the Development of Angry White Men and Women: 2017
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This enlightening auto-ethnography examines how social class (and other social institutions and...
Angels with Dirty Faces: The Footballing History of Argentina
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The definitive history of Argentinian football from the award-winning author of Inverting the...