Threshold: A Memoir

Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Threshold: A Memoir by Faith A. Colburn, Faith A. Colburn
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Faith A. Colburn ISBN: 9781301878116
Publisher: Faith A. Colburn Publication: January 30, 2013
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Faith A. Colburn
ISBN: 9781301878116
Publisher: Faith A. Colburn
Publication: January 30, 2013
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

Our families and communities serve as the threshold we cross into our lives. Whether it’s a metaphorical threshold or the actual physical threshold that marks our front door, the crossing informs who we choose to become. This memoir is a series of twenty stories about one ordinary American family’s struggle to thrive across race and through time and space. From five-year-old Joseph Swope kidnapped and adopted by a war chief to my father blasting up U.S. Highway 41 with a turtle for a co-pilot trying to save a marriage, this memoir reveals what happens when communities fail and how they thrive. These are the stories of people who worked together and shared resources. There's the smell of wheat dust and sweat and the ozone that precedes a storm and there's the clang of green beans into a metal pot while friends and family sit on chairs dragged out into the yard where it's hard to discern the border between fireflies and stars. I can remember how safe and comfortable it was when everybody knew my name and they may not have always been glad I came, but I knew they wouldn't let me "go under." Perhaps we can retrieve that feeling in a new century.
Review: Threshold is a work that is substantial . . . in scope, ambition, stylistic polish, acumen and conviction. [It is] a sophisticated achievement . . . an excellent example of the increasingly popular genre known as creative non-fiction. Threshold is full of compelling individual portraits—the midwife Grandma Hendricks, homely George Colburn, and the uncaring doctor who commits an unforgivable atrocity . . . and portraits of individuals seeking to establish the connections that might create the community needed to enhance life beyond the survival mode . . . . It is a refined and stylistically polished work. Dr. Robert M. Luscher, author In John Updike: A Study Of The Short Fiction

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Our families and communities serve as the threshold we cross into our lives. Whether it’s a metaphorical threshold or the actual physical threshold that marks our front door, the crossing informs who we choose to become. This memoir is a series of twenty stories about one ordinary American family’s struggle to thrive across race and through time and space. From five-year-old Joseph Swope kidnapped and adopted by a war chief to my father blasting up U.S. Highway 41 with a turtle for a co-pilot trying to save a marriage, this memoir reveals what happens when communities fail and how they thrive. These are the stories of people who worked together and shared resources. There's the smell of wheat dust and sweat and the ozone that precedes a storm and there's the clang of green beans into a metal pot while friends and family sit on chairs dragged out into the yard where it's hard to discern the border between fireflies and stars. I can remember how safe and comfortable it was when everybody knew my name and they may not have always been glad I came, but I knew they wouldn't let me "go under." Perhaps we can retrieve that feeling in a new century.
Review: Threshold is a work that is substantial . . . in scope, ambition, stylistic polish, acumen and conviction. [It is] a sophisticated achievement . . . an excellent example of the increasingly popular genre known as creative non-fiction. Threshold is full of compelling individual portraits—the midwife Grandma Hendricks, homely George Colburn, and the uncaring doctor who commits an unforgivable atrocity . . . and portraits of individuals seeking to establish the connections that might create the community needed to enhance life beyond the survival mode . . . . It is a refined and stylistically polished work. Dr. Robert M. Luscher, author In John Updike: A Study Of The Short Fiction

More books from Biography & Memoir

Cover of the book Marie-Thérèse de Habsbourg by Faith A. Colburn
Cover of the book Natalie Portman 203 Success Facts - Everything you need to know about Natalie Portman by Faith A. Colburn
Cover of the book Titanic Voices by Faith A. Colburn
Cover of the book The Worst Paperboy in the World by Faith A. Colburn
Cover of the book Scratch Beginnings by Faith A. Colburn
Cover of the book Lost and Found by Faith A. Colburn
Cover of the book 'We Ain't Got No Drink, Pa' by Faith A. Colburn
Cover of the book My Memoirs by Faith A. Colburn
Cover of the book A House in Flanders by Faith A. Colburn
Cover of the book If the Creek Don't Rise by Faith A. Colburn
Cover of the book Ein Tag in Barcelona by Faith A. Colburn
Cover of the book King Harald's Saga by Faith A. Colburn
Cover of the book Cultural Nostalgias by Faith A. Colburn
Cover of the book God Spoke and I Listened by Faith A. Colburn
Cover of the book Henry VI, Margaret of Anjou and the Wars of the Roses by Faith A. Colburn
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy