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Crédit image: Melissa Hart

Œuvres de Melissa Hart

101 Ways to Love a Book (2005) 47 exemplaires
Gringa: A Contradictory Girlhood (2009) 31 exemplaires
Avenging the Owl (2016) 28 exemplaires
Daisy Woodworm Changes the World (2022) 15 exemplaires
Patriotic Songs & Symbols (2002) 10 exemplaires
Daily Warm-Ups: Reading, Grade 1 (2006) 7 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1970-03-02
Sexe
female
Nationalité
USA
Lieux de résidence
Los Angeles, California, USA
Oxnard, California, USA
Eugene, Oregon, USA
Professions
educator
writer
contributing editor
Organisations
The Writer Magazine
The Washington Post
Southern New Hampshire University (MFA in Creative Writing Program)
Courte biographie
Melissa is a Contributing Editor at The Writer Magazine, and teaches for the MFA in Creative Writing Program at Southern New Hampshire University. She lives in Eugene with her husband, daughter, three cats, five chickens, a large white rabbit, and one very patient terrier.

Membres

Critiques

With tons of heart, this book rotates around a wonderful, sibling relationship, determination and working together.

Daisy's life has been tough since her mother lost her job and both parents have decided to start their own company cleaning up after dogs. While she still has track and her best friend, she doesn't have much free time outside of chores and helping her family with other things. When her older brother wants to dive into his hobby of fashion on the internet, past cyber-bullying issues cause her parents to shut the idea down before it even gets started. But Daisy will do almost anything to help her brother achieve his dreams, especially when a class project gives her the perfect excuse.

Daisy is a character to root for and identify with from the very first page. Her love for her brother and her willingness to do whatever she can to meet her goals is inspiring. She has a good moral compass, is compassionate, empathetic and simply a nice person...although she does rebel against her parents a little bit. But then, the parent-child relationship and how her parents deal with things isn't my favorite aspect, anyway. Daisy might only be an eighth grader, but she needs to carry quite a bit of responsibility...which also makes her come across often older than she is.

The tale, characters and situations are well-laid out and do connect on an emotional level. While the pacing was slower than I enjoy, every step is well laid out and comes across naturally. Themes such as Down Syndrome, having a lisp, bullying, jealousy, and financial hardship are all addressed in an age appropriate manner and bring food for thought.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
tdrecker | Nov 8, 2022 |
Good, current stuff here and on challenging topics. Created another to-read list. Books about books
 
Signalé
BarbF410 | 1 autre critique | May 22, 2022 |
I received a copy of Wild Within by Melissa Hart in exchange for an honest review.

This book is a memoir about a couple meeting at a dog park and feeling a connection. Melissa Hart (on the path of a divorce) whose is lonely and Jonathon (a volunteer at an animal rescue mission) meet at a dog park and establish a friendship. Things progress during a drive to pick up rats and bring them to Oregon and their relationship blossoms. As a result of an illness and procedure Jonathan and Melissa who are convinced neither of them want children, are happy to continue their passion for rescuing and saving owls. But as time moves on this same passion for loving, rescuing and nurturing evokes a longing for a child and they embark on the emotional process of adoption. This book was filled with some very interesting facts and was very emotional with a lot of self searching for the couple to find what would bring them ultimate joy. Enjoyable for any animal and nature lover.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
karmakath | 1 autre critique | Sep 8, 2014 |
We have a hawk of some sort who sometimes spends time in the trees in our backyard. He (somehow I assume it's a he) looks majestic sitting on a bare branch surveying the yard. And after his visits, I have noticed there's a definite reduction in the squirrel population. Sometimes I see him soaring above the trees too. There's something beautiful and impressive in his effortless looking flight and I keep meaning to make a visit to the local raptor center here north of town to see one of his relatives closer. Perhaps Melissa Hart's newly released memoir, Wild Within, will help push me to finally do it.

Hart is newly separated and lonely in her new town of Eugene, Oregon. In order to get out and interact with people, she takes her dogs to the dog park as often as possible. It is here among the animals that she starts to make friends and where she meets Jonathan, the tall, handsome, quiet man she will eventually marry, who takes her on a road trip to collect 600 lbs. of frozen rats on their first date. This cargo might seem odd but Jonathan volunteers at the local raptor center, handling birds in the education program and the rats are meals for the center's birds. Wanting to spend more time with this unusual man, Hart decides to volunteer there herself despite the fact that she is scared of the birds, their curved beaks, and their sharp, powerful talons.

Initially, Hart is willing to clean the aviary cages but not to turn her back on the birds and certainly not to consider handling any of them. But she slowly falls in love with some of the permanent resident birds at the center, feeling for those human imprinted birds and the birds who are too physically damaged to ever be rehabilitated and released back into the wild. And she eventually changes her mind, agreeing to learn to handle the birds and even to train them. As she and Jonathan begin to build their life together, a life that includes all sorts of varieties of birds of prey and any number of abandoned furry creatures who find their way to the Hart/Smith home, they change their minds about remaining childless and try to start adoption proceedings to give an orphan a home.

But there is nothing easy about their adoption quest and frustration, stress, and changes of plan are the order of the day. As a counterbalance to the uncertainty and waiting for an adoption placement, Hart starts working to acclimate Archimedes, a skittish snowy owl at the center, to a handler's glove. It is in watching the struggle of the birds she works with that she learns to handle her own struggles and disappointments with grace and determination.

Hart's story is one of overcoming fear and the healing power of love and acceptance, not only in her own life but also for the birds that human carelessness has unthinkingly injured. She celebrates the joys of volunteerism and the ways that it enriches the people who offer of themselves. Her detailed descriptions of the individual birds and what characterizes their species are lovingly written and easily accessible to the layman. The hard, often disappointing, and long journey to adopt and the multitude of feelings that their journey inspired are honest and open. The melding of the two topics, the birds and conservation and Hart's personal journey toward parenthood, is well done. Hart's passion for the raptors comes through the page easily and makes the reader want to see these impressive birds themselves. The timeline is sometimes compressed and other times extended, making it a little difficult to really appreciate how long the adoption quest was taking though. And in the end, when Hart mentions that it has been years since she's worked at the raptor center, there is no reason why given; although it would be fairly easy to guess given the changes in her life, a confirmation of the reason would not have been amiss. Over all, this was an engaging read that offered not only insights into the different ways in which we build family and come together but also a glimpse into the untethered life of some of nature's most magnificent birds.
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
whitreidtan | 1 autre critique | Aug 21, 2014 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
33
Membres
332
Popularité
#71,553
Évaluation
4.1
Critiques
8
ISBN
41

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