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3 Remote Warehouse Self Help- General

Next to Godliness: Finding the Sacred in Housekeeping

by Alice Peck

Next to Godliness: Finding the Sacred in Housekeeping Cover

 

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

At some point in everyone's life comes the time to clean up. It might be your kitchen after dinner; it might be your community after a crisis. One way or another, it must be done, and a considerable amount of time is spent doing it. This spiritual anthology gives the process of cleaning house depth and resonance while exploring the point where a multitude of belief systems intersect?that place where clean and holy meet. Drawing from religious texts, personal narratives, fiction, and verse, this inspiring collection finds a common thread: cleaning as a spiritual path. In writings as diverse as those of Rumi, Allen Ginsberg, Gandhi, Tillie Olsen, Zen Master Dogen, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Starhawk, James Baldwin, Kathleen Norris, the Dalai Lama, and the Bible, dozens of the world's best writers and thinkers illuminate what is holy about cleaning house.

Review:

"In recent years Americans have had a renewed love affair with their homes, so it's no surprise to discover new attentiveness to cleaning them. This collection of tidbits from essays, fiction and poetry that reference housecleaning, compiled by an editor and producer in the television industry, explores everything from Booker T. Washington scolding Negroes who kept house poorly to the 'big mess' made by the attacks on the Twin Towers. The book, from a multifaith and multicultural perspective, includes everything from the obvious and well-known (Thich Nhat Hanh and Brother Lawrence on washing dishes) to the less expected (Jarvis Jay Masters writing about cleaning his cell on death row). Some pieces have only the most tenuous connection to housekeeping, much less what's sacred about it, such as the excerpt from Baldwin's Go Tell It on the Mountain, where cleaning serves primarily as backdrop. While many excerpts are intriguing, the collection is largely unprocessed, with only brief introductions to the sections on washing dishes, laundry, sweeping and so forth, and no introductions to the individual excerpts. While each piece includes some aspect of housekeeping, the reader is left not quite knowing what to make of the whole." Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)

Product Details

ISBN:
9781594732140
Author:
Peck, Alice
Publisher:
Skylight Paths Publishing
Subject:
General
Subject:
Religious aspects
Subject:
Home
Subject:
Motivational & Inspirational
Subject:
Cleaning
Subject:
Home -- Religious aspects.
Subject:
Self-Help : General
Publication Date:
20070331
Binding:
TRADE PAPER
Language:
English
Illustrations:
Y
Pages:
193
Dimensions:
9.00x6.04x.65 in. .75 lbs.

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Next to Godliness: Finding the Sacred in Housekeeping New Trade Paper
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Product details 193 pages Skylight Paths Publishing - English 9781594732140 Reviews:
"Publishers Weekly Review" by , "In recent years Americans have had a renewed love affair with their homes, so it's no surprise to discover new attentiveness to cleaning them. This collection of tidbits from essays, fiction and poetry that reference housecleaning, compiled by an editor and producer in the television industry, explores everything from Booker T. Washington scolding Negroes who kept house poorly to the 'big mess' made by the attacks on the Twin Towers. The book, from a multifaith and multicultural perspective, includes everything from the obvious and well-known (Thich Nhat Hanh and Brother Lawrence on washing dishes) to the less expected (Jarvis Jay Masters writing about cleaning his cell on death row). Some pieces have only the most tenuous connection to housekeeping, much less what's sacred about it, such as the excerpt from Baldwin's Go Tell It on the Mountain, where cleaning serves primarily as backdrop. While many excerpts are intriguing, the collection is largely unprocessed, with only brief introductions to the sections on washing dishes, laundry, sweeping and so forth, and no introductions to the individual excerpts. While each piece includes some aspect of housekeeping, the reader is left not quite knowing what to make of the whole." Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)
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