Change Me Into Zeus's Daughter

by Barbara Robinette Moss


Change Me Into Zeus's Daughter - Adobe eBook

Change Me Into Zeus's Daughter

Adobe

Platforms
Windows Vista / XP / 2000, Mac OS X Tiger

Features
Advanced navigation, search, bookmarks, and multiple viewing options.

Availability:
Download Now

Price: $9.99


Change Me Into Zeus's Daughter - Microsoft Reader eBook

Change Me Into Zeus's Daughter

Microsoft Reader

Platforms
Windows 98+, Tablet PC, Pocket PC 2003

Features
ClearType, advanced navigation, search, personal library, bookmarks, notes, and drawing.

Availability:
Download Now

Price: $9.99


Change Me Into Zeus's Daughter - Mobipocket eBook

Change Me Into Zeus's Daughter

Mobipocket

Platforms
Windows PC, Palm, Pocket PC, Windows Mobile, SymbianOS, Blackberry, iLiad, eBookMan, and more.

Features
Easy to install, Very Compatible, Touch-screen page turning, Bookmarks, Adjustable font size and color, Search.

Availability:
Download Now

Price: $9.99


Change Me Into Zeus's Daughter Summary

Barbara Robinette Moss burst onto the scene four years ago with an unforgettable autobiographical piece called "Near the Center of the Earth". That essay, a powerful, poetic account of Moss's poverty-stricken childhood and her artistic mother's desperate measures to provide enough food for her eight children, won the Gold Medal for Personal Essay from the prestigious William Faulkner Creative Writing Competition and immediately brought Moss to the attention of writers and critics everywhere. Now, with the long-awaited Change Me into Zeus's Daughter -- a poignant and wholly compelling memoir that grew out of the author's original essay -- Moss has not only made good on her initial promise, she has achieved a rare and abiding triumph of artistry and spririt. Woven from humor, grief, love, and regret, Moss's memoir is the haunting story of a difficult and keenly felt life: plagued by her family's poverty, her father's alcoholic abuse, and her painful awareness of her own malformed face, she is rescued by a life-giving appreciation for literature and art, and a driving determination to achieve a life marked by beauty.

A haunting and triumphant story of a difficult and keenly felt life, Change Me into Zeus's Daughter is a remarkable literary memoir of resilience, redemption, and growing up in the South. Barbara Robinette Moss was the fourth in a family of eight children raised in the red-clay hills of Alabama. Their wild-eyed, alcoholic father was a charismatic and irrationally proud man who, when sober, captured his children's timid awe, but when (more often) drunk, roused them from bed for severe punishment or bizarre all-night poker games. Their mother was their angel: erudite and stalwart -- her only sin her inability to leave her husband for the sake of the children. Unlike the rest of her family, Barbara bore the scars of this abuse and neglect on the outside as well as the inside. As a result of childhood malnutrition and a complete lack of medical and dental care, the bones in her face grew abnormally ("like a thin pine tree"), and she ended up with what she calls "a twisted, mummy face." Barbara's memoir brings us deep into not only the world of Southern poverty and alcoholic child abuse but also the consciousness of one who is physically frail and awkward, relating how one girl's debilitating sense of her own physical appearance is ultimately saved by her faith in the transformative powers of artistic beauty: painting and writing. From early on and with little encouragement from the world, Barbara embodied the fiery determination to change her fate and achieve a life defined by beauty. At age seven, she announced to the world that she would become an artist -- and so she did. Nightly, she prayed to become attractive, to be changed into "Zeus's daughter," the goddess of beauty, and when her prayers weren't answered, she did it herself, raising the money for years of braces followed by facial surgery. Growing up "so ugly," she felt the family's disgrace all the more acutely, but the result has been a keenly developed appreciation for beauty -- physical and artistic -- the evidence of which can be seen in her writing. Despite the deprivation, the lingering image from this memoir is not of self-pity but of the incredible bond between these eight siblings: the raucous, childish fun they had together, the making-do, and the total devotion to their desperate mother, who absorbed most of the father's blows for them and who plied them with art and poetry in place of balanced meals. Gracefully and intelligently woven in layers of flashback, the persistent strength of Barbara Moss's memoir is itself a testament to the nearly lifesaving appreciation for literature that was her mother's greatest gift to her children.



eBooks > Titles > Authors > Biographies > War Stories > Barbara Robinette Moss > Change Me Into Zeus's Daughter