DO YOU STILL BELIEVE in MAGIC? WHY the SIXTIES GENERATION IS LOSING FAITH 33 Clayne W Robison a WEB of ILLUMINATING MOMENTS 23 Dennis Clark
Do You STILLBELIEVE IN MAGIC? WHY THE SIXTIES GENERATION IS LOSING FAITfI J. FREDERIC VOROS, JR M orwlonW~flenpast and present I I Windows on the Sea and Other Stories Linda Sillitoe I In these prize-winningshort stories, Linda Sillitoe chronicles the lives of contemporarywomen in conflict with well-meaning but ultimately unempathetic men, especially local church leaders whose remedy for emotional trouble is too often a priesthood blessing and an admonition to sin no more. "These absorbing glimpses into changing Mormon lives nag at the mind and linger. They have their own special time and place and the Utah sense of forever." -- Virginia Sorenson, author, Miracles on Maple Hill "Among Sillitoe's characters are sufferers, survivors,and experimenters. No one else writing in the Mormon tradition teaches us so intensely, so emphatically, that women think and feel differently from men." -- Led Peterson, author, The Backslider "Some of Linda Sillitoe's stories open wounds, some cauterize, and some help heal." -- Eugene England, author, Dialogues With Myself Paper. 150 pages. $9.95; Letters from Exile The Correspondence of Martha Hughes Cannon, 1886-1888 Constance Lieber and John Sillito Martha Hughes Cannon, a University of Michigan educated physician, suffragist, and state senator, was the polygamous wife of Angus Cannon, a ranking Mormon church official. In 1886, Martha, twenty- three years Angus's junior, fled with her baby daughter to England to escape federal prosecution. Mattie's spirited, articulate letters over the next two years shed surprising light on the day-to-day reality of polygamy and outlined her jealousy of Angus's other wives, her unfulfilled passion while away from him, and her resentment at having to lie about her identity to escape detection and prison.
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