Blogger Widgets Blogger Widgets ¡Mira que luna......! Look at that moon....! Resources for learning English: Nobel Peace Prize Winners’ Memoirs

!Mira que luna! Look at that moon! Resources for learning English

!Mira que luna! Look at that moon! Resources for learning English
Fernando Olivera: El rapto.- TEXT FROM THE NOVEL The goldfinch by Donna Tartt (...) One night we were in San Antonio, and I was having a bit of a melt-down, wanting my own room, you know, my dog, my own bed, and Daddy lifted me up on the fairgrounds and told me to look at the moon. When "you feel homesick", he said, just look up. Because the moon is the same wherever you go". So after he died, and I had to go to Aunt Bess -I mean, even now, in the city, when I see a full moon, it's like he's telling me not to look back or feel sad about things, that home is wherever I am. She kissed me on the nose. Or where you are, puppy. The center of my earth is you". The goldfinch Donna Tartt 4441 English edition

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Nobel Peace Prize Winners’ Memoirs


By Jason Boog on Galley Cat, October 7, 2011

Author and West African activist Leymah Gbowee, Liberian president Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and Yemeni activist Tawukul Karmanall shared the Nobel Peace Prize today.
If you want to learn more about Gbowee, Beast Books recently published her memoir,Mighty Be Our Powers. HarperCollins published Sirleaf’s memoir, This Child Will Be Great.
Here’s more about Gbowee’s memoir: “In 1999 she was introduced to a fledgling network of women working to bring peace and social justice to West Africa. She quickly discovered a focus for her talents—and a way to fight against the war that threatened to destroy her. In a dream, almost a religious vision, she heard a voice telling her quite clearly to ‘gather the women to pray for peace.’ The result was the creation of the country’s first Christian-Muslim alliance, which eventually grew into the Liberian Mass Action for Peace, a nonviolent women’s protest movement that helped end the dictatorship of Charles Taylor and the war. Gbowee has become famous for her role in persuading thousands of ordinary women to dress all in white and demonstrate day after day, month after month, for an end to the fighting.”
SOURCE: http://beattiesbookblog.blogspot.com/2011/10/nobel-peace-prize-winners-memoirs.html

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