Question Home

Position:Home>Books & Authors> Which two out of these three books?


Question: Which two out of these three books!?
Pat Conroy "My Losing Season"
Allison Glock "Beauty Before Comfort"
Edward Humes "School of Dreams"Www@QuestionHome@Com


Best Answer - Chosen by Asker:
I went to Barnes and Noble!.com and put the synopsis and reviews here to help you decide, personally I think you should read Beauty Before Comfort and School of Dreams!.!.!.they sound the best, though My Losing Season sounds good too!.


My Losing Season:

“I was born to be a point guard, but not a very good one!. !. !. !.There was a time in my life when I walked through the world known to myself and others as an athlete!. It was part of my own definition of who I was and certainly the part I most respected!.

Book Magazine
The popular novelist of such books as The Prince of Tides and Beach Music establishes himself as the Homer of sweat socks in this memoir of a collegiate basketball season!. For the rest of Conroy's teammates, The Citadel's 8–17 record in 1966–1967 made it a season best forgotten, but the author remembers it as an odyssey of hardwood heroics, Olympian fortitude and larger-than-life adversaries, with the occasional temptations of a coed siren!. Despite flashes of insight into the sport he loves (along with clues to the autobiographical underpinnings of his fiction), the bulk of Conroy's self-important prose can be as difficult to penetrate as a zone defense!. "I wore the memories of that season like stigmata or a crown of thorns," intones the author, after earlier admitting that "the games are fading on me now where once they imprinted themselves, bright as decals, on the whitewashed fences of memory!." If only Conroy had taken seriously the question posed by a newspaper editor who responded to a thirteen-page letter Conroy sent him during his senior year: "Have you ever thought about writing with economy and restraint!?" Author—Don McLeese

Beauty Before Comfort:

""The first lesson [my grandmother] ever taught me was that dancing matters!.!.!. When she did come across men she fancied who didn't dance, she sent them away until they did!. They always learned, because my grandmother was bitingly beautiful, and that is the second lesson she taught me - that beauty inspires, all of God's beauty, but especially hers!."" "So writes Allison Glock at the start of her memoir of her maternal grandmother, Aneita Jean Blair, a woman who came of age during the Depression in a West Virginia factory town yet refused to succumb to the desperation that surrounded her!. Instead, Aneita Jean rouged her cheeks and kicked up her heels and did her best to forget the realities of life in an insular community where your neighbors could be as unforgiving as the Appalachian landscape!. Before it was all over, Aneita Jean would have seven marriage proposals and her share of the tragedies that befall small-town girls with bushels of suitors and bodies like Miss America, girls "who dare to see past the dusty perimeters of their lives!."" Glock travels back through time, assisted by a fistful of old photos and the piercing childhood memories of her grandmother, "a skinny, eager child with disobedient hair and bottomless longing!." Together they guide us through the cramped dankness of the pottery plants, the dense sweetness of the holler, and into the surging promise of the Ohio River, capturing not only the irrepressible vitality of Aneita Jean Blair, but also the rich ambiance of working-class West Virginia during the twenties, the Great Depression, and World War II!.

The New York Times
Aneita Jean's story, of course, varies only in its particulars from who knows how many other tales of beauty and talent blooming furiously in some American backwater, witnessed only by people who, possessing no other resources, grind it up to ameliorate their own anonymous hungers!. We mistake the tale of the starlet discovered in the drugstore as the archetypal American story, when it's the story, most often untold, of the beauty who goes undiscovered, the voice that goes unheard, that comes closer to getting right who we actually are!. Aneita Jean proved to be lucky after all in that her lifelong howl of longing and dissatisfaction was heard and taken to heart by a writer of uncommon generosity!. Aneita Jean Blair Thornberry is beautiful!. And she looks just like somebody we know!. — Tony Earley

School of Dreams:

Synopsis
A Pulitzer prize-winning journalist spends a year immersed in the high-pressure world of a competitive public high school—where teens chase 4!.0 grades point averages, survive on as little as four hours of sleep, and chug lattes like water—and discovers the human story of what it takes to be a top student in America!. Humes introduces a cast of passionate students, and touches on topics relevant to parents, teachers, administrators, and politicians, including destruction of equal education in America; standardized testing and cheating by students, parents, schools, and governments; public schools that succeed; and over-testing in our nation's schools!. Annotation ?2003 Book News, Inc!., Portland, OR

The Washington Post
Most books about education are notoriously dull; this one -- a masterly example of passionate yet even-handed reporting -- is as enthralling as Richard Hofstatder's classic Anti-Intellectualism in American Life!. It deserves an A+, even without grade inflation!. — Michael DirdaWww@QuestionHome@Com

None!. Read Twilight instead!.Www@QuestionHome@Com

None, sorry!.!.!.Www@QuestionHome@Com

Never read any of them! Sorry I can't help you! Let me know how they are though!
: ) Hope someone helps youWww@QuestionHome@Com

Sorry I didint read that book yet!.!.!.Www@QuestionHome@Com