Growing with the Grain
   About Contact Us Internet Links Custom Other e-mail me
  GROWING WITH THE GRAIN
Growing with the Grain, Dynamic Families Shaping History From Ancient Times to the Present tells about exceptional (though not necessarily famous) people from across several continents and more centuries, seen in the context of their family life and especially their childhood experience, education, and reading. Accomplishments in a variety of fields are described, from business to poetry, and from printmaking to mathematics. Approximately sixty brief family biographies are arranged chronologically, so skimming through the volume serves as an abbreviated introduction to world history, from ancient Rome to the present. The recommended readership ranges from under 10 to over 90. The book is ideal for informative browsing.
Drawings made by the author's daughter, Chloë Feldman Emison, introduce each biography, and a world map is provided, along with suggestions for further reading. Each biography also features a historiated initial which comments on the text to follow, and there are abstract decorations as well. The book, produced in hard cover with heavy paper, is intended to be a beautiful object as well as a good read.
The author, Patricia Emison, teaches the history of art at the University of New Hampshire. She has been awarded the Johnson Society of London essay prize for 2010 and a proxime accessit prize for the Julia Briggs Essay Competition of the Virginia Woolf Society of Great Britain for 2011. The book originated as a homeschooling project with her elder daughter when she was 13 and 14. Chloë's watercolors and pen and ink drawings have been shown by the Tara Peck Gallery in Portsmouth, N.H. (see the review in the Portsmouth Herald, Dec. 14, 2006: "impressive and whimsical"), the Salmon Falls Village Gallery in Rollinsford, N.H. ("funny and interesting," Seacoast Online, July 21, 2007), in the Burlingame Gallery in Exeter, N.H., in a solo exhibition in the Emerging Artists Room and as part of an exhibition called "Telling Stories," which included a book-signing and reading by Jodi Picoult. In May of 2010 she had a solo show at the Three Graces Gallery, Portsmouth, N.H., "Behind the Curtain," and in November 2010 she participated in the "Tulipomania" show. Both ^Growing with the Grain^ and ^The Lady with the Alligator Purse^ are also for sale at The Three Graces. Chloë received the Mixed Media Award at the 65th Members' Prize Show, Cambridge Art Association, Fall 2009, judged by Joseph Ketner II. See www.cambridgeart.org. During 2010-11 she studied at the Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art, Oxford University, where she had a solo show, "US: Deceased Shopping." In April 2011 she won the Outstanding Emerging Artist Award for the Seacoast area, sponsored by Spotlight Magazine. (See http://www.youtube.com/user/seacoastonline?blend=3&ob=5#p/u/0/AFH7HeMEjlM) Her work was included in "Coming of Age: New England Artists Under 30" at the Sharon Arts Center, Peterborough, N.H., March 3-April 28, 2012, and at the South Shore Art Center, Cohasset, Ma., juried by Dina Deitsch, March 20-May 6, 2012. A video may be seen on You-Tube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RsTfTxgpciE. For a recent animation, see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UAff6uctLtc&feature=plcp Chloë attended Forkbeard Fantasy Summer School, Devon, in July 2012, followed by a month as visiting artist at Wasps Studios, Glasgow. In Sept. she was in residency at the Contemporary Artists Center in Woodside, New York, in October at Hrisey, Iceland, In Nov./Dec. at the Vermont Studio Center (Nov./Dec.) and in Feb. at Can Serrat, Spain. She was selected for the 34th Bradley International; "Drawing out of Bounds," the Wheaton Biennial; and the NAWA Small Works Open Exhibition, New York, all in Winter/Spring 2013.
Terms children might not be familiar with are defined along the way, but the writing is not geared to any specific juvenile age. Instead, it is intended for browsing by readers of a variety of ages, ideally for parents and children to share both reading and talking about. See The Wire, Dec. 6, 2006: "intended for a wide audience...thoroughly researched, but not dry and academic...readers can understand the ways in which history is full of connections."
The book is now available in a limited edition of 500 copies, signed and numbered. ISBN 0-9765572-0-7, 340 pp., numerous b/w illustrations, $40.00 plus $5 shipping and handling ($10 overseas), by personal check. There is also a 20-page paperback full-color picture book, The Lady with the Alligator Purse, illustrating the clapping rhyme "Miss Lucy had a baby; she named him Tiny Tim," 4 x 6". Second edition available for $10 (including postage and handling; bulk discounts available). Please write to order: pae@ladyillyria.com.




|About| |Contact Us| |Internet Links| |Custom| |Other|