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If you're looking for a trite phrase to describe the essence of this book, try "A trip down memory lane." It might be as apt as any. And Jim Whiting's Analecta fits that mold. His bittersweet telling of a childhood filled with sometimes warm and fuzzy anecdotes may trigger fond memories of your own younger days. The more unpleasant aspects of growing up are also visited here and these tales will have you grateful that your experiences--perhaps similar--are in the past . . . only to be remembered, sometimes painfully. Analecta begins at a critical point in the author's life. He is on the final lap of a solo car journey from upstate New York to Southern California. Six days ago he had left a life that had become routine, comfortable, and very much a part of himself-- in retrospect, perhaps too much so. He would, in a matter of hours be reunited with his wife, who had taken a job a month prior, in Solana Beach. In New York State they had left behind four of five of their grown children and five grandchildren. He also left behind almost twenty-nine years in broadcasting and an overlapping career in cartooning-that's his resume. Flashbacks to his preteen years reveal a kid who shows very early entrepreneurial leanings. He has a tendency to want to "belong" but he has difficulty being at ease in belonging. Whiting touches on the uneasy relationship with his older brother (is that so different from many siblings have?) There are interludes about a twelve-year-old kid getting lost in on his first visit to New York City; a high school girl friend; Navy boot camp; magic in New Orleans; personalities in Radio; poems (some very good-- some not so-- but fun); observations made in classrooms, business offices, and on the tennis court. Don't look for gossip, accusations, or grievances; none of them are in this book. It's definitely not a downer. Returning to Mell Lazarus's Introduction for a final note: "It's a great book! If you're like me, you'll love it. If you're not like me, you'll love it."
Reprint of the original, first published in 1842.
In The Analecta, Harshvardhan traces a path to the subjective elements to the lost art of poetry in current Modernist times of the world – binding the universal emotions with his own style of sensitive response. The poetic collection of the human sentiments – The Analecta – is an attempt to engage the reader in intricate yet elusive questions about love, life, death, desire, passion and human nature and its response to worldly matters. Harshvardhan Rai profoundly uses his distinctive style of establishing coherence between exotic and romantic. The poems of The Analecta are highly influenced by the style and elegance of the classic Romantic & Aesthetic poetry of English. Get ready to dive deep into the passionate and sentimental ocean of human emotions, which is spilt into your heart through the poems of The Analecta…