mervo5959556ae

Fetullah Silken Silken itibaren Playa Hermosa, Kostarika itibaren Playa Hermosa, Kostarika

Okuyucu Fetullah Silken Silken itibaren Playa Hermosa, Kostarika

Fetullah Silken Silken itibaren Playa Hermosa, Kostarika

mervo5959556ae

Silver and Gold is cute story about a bi-guy, Geoff, who meets a hairdresser, Abe, and they clumsily attempt to form a loving relationship. This is the first book by Ms. Rhodes that I've read and I like her clean writing style. The characters are flushed out, but I didn't care too much for Geoff. He struck me as someone that I wouldn't trust. I think Abe could have done better. I give Silver and Gold four stars.

mervo5959556ae

captures the literary approaches, as well as other critical methods of each of the gospels, supper accessible, organized in an incredibly helpful way to those just starting to study the gospels. will encourage your faith, give you a fresh look at Jesus, the early church, and the purpose, application and authority of the scriptures.

mervo5959556ae

Okay, the truth is I never quite made it through this book so much as I just lost steam about half way through. It was decent, but I found the discussion on ecofeminism a bit trite and uninspiring. Maybe it gets better at the end, but I got lost in the middle, which is more about political philosophy than ecofeminsim. The book is super fractured, which makes me think it is a dissertation-turned-book. What a shame that it couldn't be edited to bring the various discussions into a more integrated and literary format.

mervo5959556ae

This is my only five-star-rated book. i gave it this rating not because it is the best book ever, but because it is the book that i first connected with. it was like the world of literature opened up before my eyes when i read this book at age 15. From the very first page, the beauty of his discriptive language awakened something inside me.

mervo5959556ae

Cannot recommend enough this exploration of feminism over the last century. Her discussions of the flip in focus from sexual acts to sexual identities and now back to sexual acts gave me a philosophical undergirding for what I was doing with howtomakeloveto.com, which focuses on acts and never asks what you consider yourself or forces you to encounter your identity in the way it's been talked about for so long. My note on that part: Final section on the role of he HIV crisis on sexual discourse. Main interesting part here was the transition back to a focus from sexual identity to sexual conduct or behavior, which was the focus of all the old laws outlawing certain behaviors. p137 "By the late 1980's, it was evident that there had been a shift in HIV/AIDS health education policy away from talking about risk groups to emphasizing risk behaviors." Academia and society hasn't really caught up to this public health necessity, but the nose of the boat will ultimately turn. Earlier on, there's a wonderful discussion of the queer critique of heterosexuality--or the idea that it is this monolithic practice, so normative and ordinary that it doesn't need to be studied. Another part that I loved documented the various fights among lesbians over sexual conduct: what was the right way to have sex, what was the wrong way. Finally, there was the discussion of justifying gayness. There's the push to say it's genetic, but then that's kind of an apology, on the order of, "I'd be straight if I could but I can't help myself." So then choice is ennobled. My favorite explanation for lesbianism (which the last time I read anything on the topic, had no identified genetic / biological basis) was that every one of us is born to a woman and shares his or her first physically loving relationship with a woman. Therefore everyone, men and women alike, are capable of physically loving a woman. Everyone is a lesbian. There's something I can get behind.