Sacred Heart
Posted by Michelle Moquin on December 5th, 2009
I have discovered that I am totally enthralled with Sarah….and no I am not speaking of Palin. Sarah Dunant is an author that I just discovered the other day while listening to the radio. Her interview was fascinating and her stories intrigued me so much that they are on my wish list.
Sarah Dunant is the author of the international bestseller The Birth of Venus, which has received major worldwide acclaim and In the Company of the Courtesan. With the publication of Sacred Hearts, she rounds out a Renaissance trilogy bringing voice to the lives of three different women in three different historical contexts. Sarah Dunant’s tireless research has resulted in vivid reconstructions of womens’secret histories in the characters of a Florentine Noblewoman, a Venetian Courtesan and with Sacred Hearts the spellbinding and fascinating lives of the Sisters of Santa Caterina.
Here’s a clip featuring her latest Book, “Sacred Hearts’:
If you are interested in hearing more about her previous two books in this trilogy, or about Sarah herself, click here to go to Sarah’s website. And no I am not getting paid to push these books, nor did I receive these books for free. (I wish:)
Doug: Thanks for tweeting – How do I get a button to facebook share on my site? – enlighten me.
Anna: I forgot, yes, holiday wishes are always welcome. Thank you.
Enjoy the weekend!
Gratefully your blog host,
michelle
Aka BABE: Your Bad Ass Bitch Editor
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December 5th, 2009 at 9:27 am
Anonz
You are the reason I read this blog. I’ve wanted you since the first time I started reading your comments and I imagined, like many of Michelle’s readers, your comments were written to me.
Now, I no longer just want you, I love you.
If your last poetic prose was written to me, this is how I would’ve responded to my love:
You are always in my thoughts.
This tree stands alone, rooted in the garden that you tended
…waiting…waiting….waiting for you to plant yourself beside me, to forever enjoy the fruits of my garden, that you claim…that I give to you…that are yours alone.
Like a tree my limbs are open and spread wide, my knot swells, dripping with sweet succulent sap even sweeter than the last….waiting…waiting….waiting.
Many days I am a strong Redwood, but many, I am a weeping willow wishing to shed my past, and reveal a love so strong, a desire so passionate…a blossoming garden worthy of your possession, one that will flourish and bear fruit from your seed.
So I wait….and wait….and wait…wishing for the seasons to pass, as every moment that does, makes me believe that I am closer to having you possess this tree and live in my garden forever.
Ricky
December 5th, 2009 at 10:42 am
Wouldn’t you love to know for sure that you’re not being overcharged by banks, credit card companies and the like? Attorney Edgar Dworsky, JD, former consumer education consultant for the Federal Trade Commission and creator of the consumer advocacy Web site ConsumerWorld.org explains how you can be certain you aren’t being stuck with false charges. Whether it’s a bank, utility company, or credit card, he identifies the most common mistakes — and tells who to call, what to say and how to get the problem solved in your favor.
December 5th, 2009 at 1:23 pm
Okay, I’d like to know all that. So how do I reach this Edgar Dworsky?
Why give half of the solution to a problem? How about just spinning how we can get our hands on the information that will tell us if we are being ripped off.
Fred
December 5th, 2009 at 1:28 pm
Hafa adai
I have been arguing for months that Guam is nor ready for this huge military influx of people. Now I have some back up.
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Guam not ready today, even less for buildup
BY GERHARD SCHWAB • DECEMBER 6, 2009
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Before we ask what needs to change for the human services sector to be ready for the military buildup, we need to ask why our human services of today still are not fully prepared to deal with the social problems associated with Guam’s buildup during the past 30 years.
In this time period, the population in Guam almost doubled, from 105,979 in 1980 to about 200,000 expected in the 2010 Census. Although we had three decades to adjust our human services to the increased population and to the socioeconomic changes in Guam, we cannot help but feel “mamalao” and frustrated when federal courts intervene to enforce the delivery and quality of basic public social services, when children in private and public child welfare organizations experience neglect and abuse, when hard-working families do not have the health care and family support they need to care for their elderly and sick family members, when our best local social service professionals leave Guam because of poor working conditions and/or lack of support and resources for their work, when … when …
If we, despite the many hard-working caring, and professionally competent people in the human service field still cannot get our human services competent enough to fully address today’s social problems, then it is safe to expect that we shall be even less prepared for the planned military buildup.
The magnitude of changes proposed by the military planners are unprecedented in our community; the rate of speed and lack of local input and control in the planning process do not allow an accurate forecasting and planning for the social consequences and problems associated with the military buildup.
Because we are not ready for today, and even less ready for tomorrow, we need to look at the societal, structural factors that produce and maintain our social problems. In order to prevent the increase of social problems, we need to reduce the forces that produce social problems in the various realms of our lives. In other words, slow down and make the military buildup incremental and contingent on the achievement of critical communal quality of life indicators; such as political self-determination, education, health, housing and employment.
Hence, the military buildup only should be allowed to proceed, if:
A timeline for the exercise of political self-determination of the Chamorro people is agreed upon and gradually implemented;
The federal government allocates resources to gradually raise the funding levels of Guam’s public schools to the same funding levels as military schools;
A health-care plan is developed and approved to guarantee all residents of Guam access to health-care facilities equally well-equipped and resourced as Guam’s military hospital;
A set of public policies ensures that the quality of housing inside and outside the military fences equally meets human needs; and
Buildup construction projects are linked with investments into the development of a sustainable local work force.
Gerhard Schwab, Ph.D. is a professor of social work at the University of Guam.
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I hope those who are ultimately responsible for the welfare of the people of Guam are listening.
Peter