download / read online ebook My Daughter, Myself .pdf.epub.mobi

My Daughter, Myself by Linda Wolfe

An Unexpected Journey


A riveting memoir about the passions and perplexities of the mother-daughter bond In My Daughter, Myself, acclaimed journalist Linda Wolfe chronicles her thirty-eight-year-old daughter’s near-fatal stroke, the arduous course of physical and mental rehabilitation that led to the young woman’s remarkable recovery, and the profound ways in which that journey from morbidity to health tested and changed every member of their blended family. Heart-stopping and highly personal, Wolfe’s memoir is an inspiring account of how a mother, suddenly confronted by every mother’s worst nightmare, must master the unfamiliar language of hospitals and illness, discover untapped wells of resilience within both her daughter and herself, and ultimately learn to let her daughter be her guide as they embark on an altogether new chapter in their lives. less

Author: Linda Wolfe
Publisher: Open Road Distribution
ISBN: 9781497660434
Format: .pdf.ibooks.epub.mobi.djvu.fb2
Release: September 2014
156 pages

Download full ebook / Audiobook / Read Online Free (US$ 00.00)


Continue reading “download / read online ebook My Daughter, Myself .pdf.epub.mobi”

download / read online ebook Grunge Is Dead .pdf.epub.mobi

Grunge Is Dead by Greg Prato

The Oral History of Seattle Rock Music


As my high school days were drawing to a close, there was certainly something bubbling in the hard rock world. Bands like Faith No More, Jane’s Addiction, Living Colour, and the Red Hot Chili Peppers were showing that not all rock bands had to sing about “fast cars and fast women” or dress like goofball spandex cowboys. Having only attended strictly big arena rock shows up to this point, I didn’t know quite what to expect when I agreed to attend a show on Saturday, March 17, 1990, at a club called L’Amour in Brooklyn, New York. The two main reasons I purchased a ticket for this three-band bill were to see the aforementioned Faith No More, as well as sci-fi metal headliners Voivod. After FNM’s fantastic set, the next band, which I was least familiar with, came onstage. The singer didn’t wait long — upon the first notes of the opening number, he was climbing over the crowd on pipes attached to the ceiling (if my memory serves me correctly — already shirtless, and wearing shorts that were completely covered in silver electrical tape), before dropping himself into the sea of “moshers” below. The guitarist looked like something out of Cheech and Chong, with a full-on beard, and his eyes seemingly constantly closed — as if he were reaching a state of nirvana playing monstrous Sabbathy riffs. The bassist’s large mop of curly hair bobbed in time to the music, while the drummer bashed out some impressively complex yet primal beats. This, my friends, was my introduction to the mighty Soundgarden. Needless to say, soon after, I was a major convert, buying just about every Soundgarden recording that I could get my hands on, and reading all the interviews on the band that I could gather. And in most of the articles, it was mentioned that there were other similarly styled bands from Soundgarden’s hometown — Seattle — that were on their way up the ladder as well. Over the next year or so, it appeared as though each month, there was a new band from the Seattle area to discover — Mother Love Bone, Alice in Chains, Tad, Temple of the Dog, Mudhoney, the Melvins, the Screaming Trees, etc. And of course, when Nirvana and Pearl Jam hit, the rock world had thankfully shifted towards music that was both honest and real. And along with it came the word that would forever be associated with the movement: grunge. While the movement didn’t turn out to be as long lasting as many figured it would, what it packed into a four-year period (1990-1994) was pretty darn extraordinary. How many songs from this period are still being played on the radio? How many of these albums sound as great today as when they first came out, continue to sell, and are still being discovered by younger generations? I rest my case. It may have only lasted a few years, but for a few brief and shining moments, grunge certainly shifted the direction of culture (and even fashion), and brought in an unmistakable feeling of change — just as the ’60s hippie and ’70s punk movements had. The original idea for doing this book came about when I was doing a Soundgarden article for Classic Rock magazine back in 2004. While interviewing the group’s early producer, Jack Endino, he mentioned that almost every single article being written about grunge bands nowadays were by writers who were not from the Seattle area, yet were giving their “revisionist take” on what happened. Which got me thinking . . . what if a book was comprised of nothing but quotes from the actual people that experienced the movement firsthand, tracing it from its very beginning to its end? In other words, letting them tell the entire story as it unfolded (with only chapter intro paragraphs from yours truly). Nearly 130 interviews later, here we are. less

Author: Greg Prato
Publisher: ECW Press
ISBN: 9781554903474
Format: .pdf.ibooks.epub.mobi.djvu.fb2
Release: April 2009
488 pages

Download full ebook / Audiobook / Read Online Free (US$ 00.00)


Continue reading “download / read online ebook Grunge Is Dead .pdf.epub.mobi”

download / read online ebook Wilhelm II .pdf.epub.mobi

Wilhelm II by John C. G. Röhl

Into the Abyss of War and Exile, 1900–1941


This final volume of John C. G. Röhl’s acclaimed biography of Kaiser Wilhelm II reveals the Kaiser’s central role in the origins of the First World War. The book examines Wilhelm’s part in the Boer War, the Russo-Japanese War, the naval arms race with Britain and Germany’s rivalry with the United States as well as in the crises over Morocco, Bosnia and Agadir. It also sheds new light on the public scandals which accompanied his reign from the allegations of homosexuality made against his intimate friends to the Daily Telegraph affair. Above all, John Röhl scrutinises the mounting tension between Germany and Britain and the increasing pressure the Kaiser exerted on his Austro-Hungarian ally from 1912 onwards to resolve the Serbian problem. Following Germany’s defeat and Wilhelm’s enforced abdication, he charts the Kaiser’s bitter experience of exile in Holland and his frustrated hopes that Hitler would restore him to the throne. less

Author: John C. G. Röhl; Sheila de Bellaigue; Roy Bridge
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
ISBN: 9781107720305
Format: .pdf.ibooks.epub.mobi.djvu.fb2
Release:

Download full ebook / Audiobook / Read Online Free (US$ 00.00)


Continue reading “download / read online ebook Wilhelm II .pdf.epub.mobi”