front cover of The Keats Brothers
The Keats Brothers
The Life of John and George
Denise Gigante
Harvard University Press, 2013

John and George Keats—Man of Genius and Man of Power, to use John’s words—embodied sibling forms of the phenomenon we call Romanticism. George’s 1818 move to the western frontier of the United States, an imaginative leap across four thousand miles onto the tabula rasa of the American dream, created in John an abysm of alienation and loneliness that would inspire the poet’s most plangent and sublime poetry. Denise Gigante’s account of this emigration places John’s life and work in a transatlantic context that has eluded his previous biographers, while revealing the emotional turmoil at the heart of some of the most lasting verse in English.

In most accounts of John’s life, George plays a small role. He is often depicted as a scoundrel who left his brother destitute and dying to pursue his own fortune in America. But as Gigante shows, George ventured into a land of prairie fires, flat-bottomed riverboats, wildcats, and bears in part to save his brothers, John and Tom, from financial ruin. There was a vital bond between the brothers, evident in John’s letters to his brother and sister-in-law, Georgina, in Louisville, Kentucky, which run to thousands of words and detail his thoughts about the nature of poetry, the human condition, and the soul. Gigante demonstrates that John’s 1819 Odes and Hyperion fragments emerged from his profound grief following George’s departure and Tom’s death—and that we owe these great works of English Romanticism in part to the deep, lasting fraternal friendship that Gigante reveals in these pages.

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front cover of KEEP BOOKS Digital Editions Beginning First Set 1
KEEP BOOKS Digital Editions Beginning First Set 1
Easy Stories for Early Readers
Andrea McCarrier
Keep Books, 2019
This set of four books offers engaging, easy to read stories in this set reinforce good health and nutrition for young children.
Stories include: Treats for Barney, Fingers, Fork, or Spoon?, Just One Bite, & Sundaes for Breakfast.
Age Level: 5-6
Grade Level: Beginning First
Reading level: C-D/4-7
KEEP BOOKS digital editions include text features and design elements that give beginning readers what they need to start reading on their own with high interest titles that they can easily manage.
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front cover of KEEP BOOKS Digital Editions Beginning First Set 2
KEEP BOOKS Digital Editions Beginning First Set 2
Easy Stories for Early Readers
Mary Fried
Keep Books, 2019
This set of four books offers engaging, easy to read stories in this set reinforce good health and nutrition for young children.
Stories include: The Farmer’s Market, Our Garden, The Running Girl, & Please and Thank You.
Age Level: 5-6
Grade Level: Beginning First
Reading level: D-E/6-8
KEEP BOOKS digital editions include text features and design elements that give beginning readers what they need to start reading on their own with high interest titles that they can easily manage.
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front cover of KEEP BOOKS Digital Editions Beginning First Set 4
KEEP BOOKS Digital Editions Beginning First Set 4
Easy Stories for Early Readers
Kecia Hicks
Keep Books, 2022
This set of four books offers easy reading to enjoy and practice at home.
Stories include: My Happy Heart; Just Like Me; Staying Safe; and Always Brush Your Teeth.

Age Level: 5-6
Grade Level: Beginning First
Reading level: D-E/5-8

KEEP BOOKS digital editions include text features and design elements that give beginning readers what they need to start reading on their own with high interest titles that they can easily manage.
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front cover of KEEP BOOKS Digital Editions Late First/Beginning Second Set 1
KEEP BOOKS Digital Editions Late First/Beginning Second Set 1
Stories for Young Readers
Mary Fried
Keep Books, 2020
This set of four books offers lots of reading practice for children who can already read easy books.
Stories include: A New House; Scary Noises; Night Games; and Digging for Dinner.
Age Level: 7-8
Grade Level: Late First/Beginning Second
Reading level: E-G/8-12
KEEP BOOKS digital editions include text features and design elements that give beginning readers what they need to start reading on their own with high interest titles that they can easily manage.
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front cover of KEEP BOOKS Digital Editions Late First/Beginning Second Set 2
KEEP BOOKS Digital Editions Late First/Beginning Second Set 2
Stories for Young Readers
Mary Fried
Keep Books, 2020
This set of four books offers lots of reading practice for children who can already read easy books.
Stories include: The Best Birthday Present; Be Careful!; Trapped; and Where Is Papa?
Age Level: 7-8
Grade Level: Late First/Beginning Second
Reading level: G-H/12-14
KEEP BOOKS digital editions include text features and design elements that give beginning readers what they need to start reading on their own with high interest titles that they can easily manage.
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front cover of Keeping Heart
Keeping Heart
A Memoir of Family Struggle, Race, and Medicine
Otis Trotter
Ohio University Press, 2015

“After saying our good-byes to friends and neighbors, we all got in the cars and headed up the hill and down the road toward a future in Ohio that we hoped would be brighter,” Otis Trotter writes in his affecting memoir, Keeping Heart: A Memoir of Family Struggle, Race, and Medicine.

Organized around the life histories, medical struggles, and recollections of Trotter and his thirteen siblings, the story begins in 1914 with his parents, Joe William Trotter Sr. and Thelma Odell Foster Trotter, in rural Alabama. By telling his story alongside the experiences of his parents as well as his siblings, Otis reveals cohesion and tensions in twentieth-century African American family and community life in Alabama, West Virginia, and Ohio.

This engaging chronicle illuminates the journeys not only of a black man born with heart disease in the southern Appalachian coalfields, but of his family and community. It fills an important gap in the literature on an underexamined aspect of American experience: the lives of blacks in rural Appalachia and in the nonurban endpoints of the Great Migration. Its emotional power is a testament to the importance of ordinary lives.

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front cover of Khabaar
Khabaar
An Immigrant Journey of Food, Memory, and Family
Madhushree Ghosh
University of Iowa Press, 2022
Independent Publishers Book Awards (IPPY Awards) gold medalist

Khabaar is a food memoir and personal narrative that braids the global journeys of South Asian food through immigration, migration, and indenture. Focusing on chefs, home cooks, and food stall owners, the book questions what it means to belong and what does belonging in a new place look like in the foods carried over from the old country? These questions are integral to the author’s own immigrant journey to America as a daughter of Indian refugees (from what’s now Bangladesh to India during the 1947 Partition of India); as a woman of color in science; as a woman who left an abusive marriage; and as a woman who keeps her parents’ memory alive through her Bengali food.
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front cover of Kin
Kin
Crystal Williams
Michigan State University Press, 2000

In her first book-length collection of poetry, Crystal Williams utilizes memory and music as she lyrically weaves her way through American culture, pointing to the ways in which alienation, loss, and sensed "otherness" are corollaries of recent phenomena. Williams writes about being adopted by an interracial couple, a jazz pianist/Ford Foundry worker and a school psychologist, and how that has affected her development as an African American woman. She tries to work out the answers to many difficult questions: in what way do African American artists define themselves? What do they owe the culture and what does it owe them? To what extent does our combined national memory inform our individual selves? These poems are steeped in the black literary tradition. They are brimming over with the oral tradition that Williams perfected while spending years on the poetry "slam" circuit. This, combined with her musical upbringing, give the collection not only a sense of urgency, but also a rhythm, a breath all its own. Kin tackles not only racial issues, but also the troubling realities of violent acts that can occur, especially in our inner cities. But more importantly, the landscape that Williams creates offers readers an alternative to the racial/political dichotomy in which we all live. Overall, the book resonates with a message of reconciliation that will leave the reader uplifted.

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front cover of The Kin Who Count
The Kin Who Count
Family and Society in Ottoman Aleppo, 1770-1840
By Margaret L. Meriwether
University of Texas Press, 1999

The history of the Middle Eastern family presents as many questions as there are currently answers. Who lived together in the household? Who married whom and for how long? Who got a piece of the patrimonial pie? These are the questions that Margaret Meriwether investigates in this groundbreaking study of family life among the upper classes of the Ottoman Empire in the pre-modern and early modern period.

Meriwether recreates Aleppo family life over time from records kept by the Islamic religious courts that held jurisdiction over all matters of family law and property transactions. From this research, she asserts that the stereotype of the large, patriarchal patrilineal family rarely existed in reality. Instead, Aleppo's notables organized their families in a great diversity of ways, despite the fact that they were all members of the same social class with widely shared cultural values, acting under the same system of family law. She concludes that this had important implications for gender relations and demonstrates that it gave women more authority and greater autonomy than is usually acknowledged.

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