Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
Very Good. Very Good condition. A copy that may have a few cosmetic defects. May also contain a few markings such as an owner's name, short gifter's inscription or light stamp.
Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
SIGNED AND INSCRIBED BY ANNABEL CLARK AND LYNN REDGRAVE Good solid copy, mild to moderate reading/age wear, no DJ if issued, may have some light markings or exowner inscription. We take great pride in accurately describing the condition of our books and media, ship within 48 hours, and offer a 100% money back guarantee. Customers purchasing more than one item from us may be entitled to a shipping discount.
Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
Near Fine. Inscribed by both Redgrave and Clark! Second edition, 2004, hardcover with pictorial paper boards, oblong quarto, 109pp., illustrated in color and b&w. Book near fine with mild rubbing, binding tight, text clean bright and unmarked. No DJ.
When Annabell Clark & her renowned mother, Lynn Redgrave, collaborated on their odyssey of Redgrave's recovery thriough breast cancer, this journal, with Clarke's photographic art, a non-fiction book of heart felt candor, became a work of mutual love.
Recovery was Redgrave's bent & it changed her values. Being alive to express herself became equal to having a 'good day'. Today, May 7th, 2010, is less than a good one since I have appreciated the multi-talented successes of Lynn Redgrave. I realize well enough who & what performance artistry has been lost due to her death. I feel angry enough to blast cancer to blue blazes.
This journal by a brave survivor of breast cancer, who wanted her photographer daughter to document & share in her mother's stages of "recovery" from the oft times curable cancer, isn't for sissies. Don't buy it if you aren't able to go through what this astutue mother & daughter duo did because they are going to take you along their path & their tracks are still warm.. This is their story. Clarke, aims her mind's & camera's lens' at the effects stages of recovery from breast cancer have upon her beloved mother.
Unlike so many vein performance artists, the kind who must be seen by the public as picture perfect, Redgrave wants to be viewed by the public, in images & her own words, during times when she was quite unwell. Redgrave's appearance in Clarke's photographs is what's become expected of cancer recovery: baldness, pale skin, rapid weight loss & frailty. Add nearly inhumane medicalization & human emotion to the mix.
Amazingly, Redgrave recovered long enough to enjoy many 'good days', passionately giving of herself through various mediums of artistry. This journal now reveals what she & her daughter overcame in order to go forth doing what they both love to do: express themselves~