I am not sure the Sisters of St. Joseph expected this from their daily lessons on the Red threat. The nuns' stories made me want to keep everything that I could. First, I would keep my faith. Much later, I would keep our regard for each other, and the ways which we revealed ourselves in these small houses.
The return from the very bloody and life changing WWII also peppers the reflections of the work, through both the ability of the community to embrace the Red scare with complete and utter servitude, build civic and amateur bomb shelters and honor those who returned with constancy. Many of the homes in Lakewood were purchased by young couples, the male partner being a returning veteran from WWII, as a result of the programs designed to help them recover and return to normalcy in a new improved America. "The sons of the veterans of the Second World War and the Korean War came of age together. I was one of them."
All the major themes of the day and the climate of an entire area are covered in this compelling account of the development of suburbia. As the narrator ages, and the development of Lakewood becomes more mature the nature of the narrative also changes, coming to terms with more modern ideals and standards of the day. One point well made is that the author is himself a city information officer, who having lived his entire life there has watched the community change from one of intolerance, unfounded fear, and socially acceptable injustice (in the same thread as the nation) to a community that must reflect the cultural diversity which now envelopes it, and the limitations of political correctness and social representation. The contradictions continue as the modern themes evolve, and as the man evolves through the work but there is only limited reflection on how these contradictions become enigmatic, as they were when Waldie recalls the humorous...
memoirs and writings of early Israel are confined in the Pentateuch, meaning Genesis through Deuteronomy. Within these pages lies the lineage of the children of Israel or the nation of Israel as it discloses in the patriarchal accounts, the story of Abraham and his sons, Isaac, and Jacob. Chronicled there, the histrionic deliverance of the progenies of Israel from Egypt as well as the founding of the nation's commandments
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