Your views on Literature & Writing
RSS icon Email icon Home icon
  • Three Cups of Tea

    Posted on March 15th, 2009 admin 1 comment

    threecupsThree Cups of Tea: One Man’s Mission to Promote Peace . . . One School at a Time
    by Greg Mortenson, David O. Relin (Viking, 2006)

    “Three Cups of Tea” grows on you. It begins with a story reminiscent of early accounts of British explorers in Africa, continues as if biographers still avoid criticizing their subjects, but then opens into a kaleidoscope of culture.

     

    Once past this slow beginning, readers encounter Greg Mortenson, a courageous young man who stops at nothing to start a school in a mountain village of Afghanistan. After taking a wrong turn in the Himalayas on his way down K2, perhaps the second highest mountain on earth, he is welcomed by the leaders of a remote village. Wanting to return their hospitality, he asks what they need, and the local elder says “education.” There were no schools there and, equally importantly, women were not allowed to have formal education.

     

    The story chronicles Mortenson’s personal struggle to build a school there. He encounters numerous problems but persists, finally obtaining the $12,000 he needs, only to find the roads to the village blocked and, even later, realizing that the construction supplies can’t be transported unless he first raises money to build a huge bridge. Amazingly, he accomplishes the task – the bridge and the school, including local women.

     

    Later, he is able to raise money for more schools and eventually to start the Central Asia Institute, bringing education to many in this remote mountain region. As he proceeds, it’s clear that no personal inconvenience is too much. He is even captured and then released by Taliban forces at grave personal risk.

     

    In the last portion of the book the reader can witness the struggle with Bin Laden and the Taliban from within the mountain territory. Taliban forces entered the region by force and regularly threaten villagers so this once delightful region has become a human tragedy. At the same time, Osama Bin Laden in seen as a product of his treatment at the hands of American officials. A classic confrontation between Mortenson and American Congressmen and even Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, leaves an indelible memory – Rummie’s shiny, gleaming shoes.

  • Creating your own Book

    Posted on March 3rd, 2009 admin No comments

    Need help publishing your manuscript in book form? For instructions on submitting to Lulu.com, request Bruce Cook’s PowerPoint file, presented last Summer at the West Virginia Writers Conference. Write cookcomm@gte.net

  • A Bond That Crumbled Tradition, by Kenechukwu Obi

    Posted on March 3rd, 2009 admin No comments
    Cover - A Bond that Crumbled Tradition

    Cover - A Bond that Crumbled Tradition

    An age-long tradition bars sons and daughters of the rich and the poor from inter-marrying in their land. Then comes this unexpected unique love that dares to challenge the tradition with its guts of steel. This love yields a bond in the conflict which ensues. A bond that makes the reunion of two hearts, which are its source, inevitable; leaving the tradition with only an option it can’t help but accept. More…

  • Innisfree 8 (March 2009)

    Posted on March 2nd, 2009 admin No comments
    Innisfree 8
    Innisfree 8
     

     

     

     Welcome to Innisfree 8. We continue our series of Closer Looks at the work of a leading contemporary poet, this time the poems of Dan Masterson. For this special issue honoring him and his work, Dan has shared with us a set of authentically gritty poems that arise from his lifelong interests in boxing, drumming, and Catholicism, as well as an autobiographical essay titled Sticks & Fists & Rosaries, which illuminates the origins of these poems. More…