Selected Product: | Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life Paperback Edition: 1 Author: Anne Lamott Publisher: Anchor Release Date: 1995-09-01 ISBN-10: 0385480016 ISBN-13: 9780385480017 List Price: $13.95 Average Customer Rating: | | Traveling Mercies: Some Thoughts on Faith ISBN-10: 0385496095 ISBN-13: 9780385496094 List Price:$14.95 Writing Down the Bones: Freeing the Writer Within ISBN-10: 1590302613 ISBN-13: 9781590302613 List Price:$14.00 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life by Anne Lamott (ISBN-10: 0385480016, ISBN-13: 9780385480017). At this time we have not yet written a review for Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life by Anne Lamott (ISBN-10: 0385480016, ISBN-13: 9780385480017). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Some Instructions on Writing and Life Teacher resource | Customer Rating: | | Book delivered promptly and in good condition. Good teacher resource for writing. Quick read. | fantastic | Customer Rating: | | Besides being a thorough exploration of writing, it's a memoir with insight into both writing and life. | Not just another how-to textbook; a must for the writer wanna-be | Customer Rating: | A cursory look at the index might have one thinking this is just another step-by-step guide to a successful, publishable writing career...with chapters neatly organized by "character, plot, dialogue..." Ever so subtley, with unexpected laughs around every turn, the first chapter pulled me in as if I was a kid listening to a good friend tell me a crazy story propped on an easy lawnchair in my own backyard. I adore Lamott's down and dirty frankness about the odds of publishing, and hysterically saw myself (a hopeful wanna-be writer) as one of her eager if not naive students. What an incredibly refreshing way she has of 'teaching' "us" through the most satiric, sometimes moronic, always satisfying stories and examples. I read much of the book on an airplane and caught myself laughing out loud at times. During the poignant and carefully observed and recorded nursing home scene, I had to hide my watery eyes, only to go back and re-read the author's uniquely touching phraseology over and over again. I think Lamott is a genius author, a wise and witty spirit, a superb mentor who knows how to grab her reader and then, sereptitiously teach her invaluable lessons on writing and life that will stick because of the intelligent and humorous context in which she reveals them. The read is fast, but the lessons therein will last a lifetime and interestingly, the book has given me the boost and confidence I needed to write, write, write. | Pep in your step! | Customer Rating: | | This is a put a pep-in-your-step writing book. It's really a book with instructions on having a WRITING life. I'm still in the thick of it but I've never laughed so hard or felt so motivated by a book to write. | helps the author, not the reader | Customer Rating: | | The best advice is in the title, which is, in other words, "step by step." I can't remember if it is this book, or "Plan B," in which the author recounts taking rolls of dimes from an older black woman in the church she attended, even after she didn't need them any more, with the rationalization that it somehow helped the older black woman to give Lamott her meager savings. She can't even disguise her opportunist ways in her writing. This book is actually pretty bleak, to me. Just because Lamott has kinky hair and feels like an outcast, she attended black churches. How condescending to the members there: "I'm one of you because I feel like the lowest member of society and can't manage to get my act together. Oh, by the way, give me money because I had a child out of wedlock. That makes me so unusual." Lamott idolizes her father, who drank like a fish himeself, and allowed her as a minor to drink and hang out with his buddies, and vilifies and dismisses her mother who successfully completed law school and started a productive career at an unlikely age. This book, as all her books, recounts the author's serious drug addictions and her self-indulgence. How many can afford to spend a month or two in complete retreat to re-write a novel that was rejected? I guess if you don't mind taking rolls of dimes from poor black women, you can. But it's not on my list of to-do's for success. Stick to truly disciplined folk, like Michael Jordan for one, for advice on success in anything. |
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