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My Own Two Feet: A Memoir

My Own Two Feet: A Memoir

List Price: $10.99
Your Price: $8.24
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Sad to see it end
Review: A must-read for all Beverly Cleary fans. Picks up the story where "A Girl from Yamhill" left off and takes us through her college years and her career as a librarian. A book that will inspire you to become a librarian or a children's book author. As well writen and accessible as all of her children's books about the gang on Klikitat Street.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Volume Two of Beverly Cleary's Wonderful Autobiography
Review: A must-read for all Beverly Cleary fans. Picks up the story where "A Girl from Yamhill" left off and takes us through her college years and her career as a librarian. A book that will inspire you to become a librarian or a children's book author. As well writen and accessible as all of her children's books about the gang on Klikitat Street.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Sad to See It End
Review: After devouring Beverly Cleary's first memoir "A Girl From Yamhill" I couldn't wait to read My Own Two Feet. The only thing to complain about is that there isn't a sequel to this one! Picking up where Yamhill left off, we share in Beverly Cleary's journey through college and into her adult years and the writing of her first book, Henry Huggins. Reading Cleary's Memoirs, I was taken back to my own childhood and my love for Ramona & Beezus. Cleary has a unique gift of simple writing that readers of all ages can enjoy, whether you are 8 or 80. I lover her writing as much today as I did when I was in the 3rd grade.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Sad to See It End
Review: After devouring Beverly Cleary's first memoir "A Girl From Yamhill" I couldn't wait to read My Own Two Feet. The only thing to complain about is that there isn't a sequel to this one! Picking up where Yamhill left off, we share in Beverly Cleary's journey through college and into her adult years and the writing of her first book, Henry Huggins. Reading Cleary's Memoirs, I was taken back to my own childhood and my love for Ramona & Beezus. Cleary has a unique gift of simple writing that readers of all ages can enjoy, whether you are 8 or 80. I lover her writing as much today as I did when I was in the 3rd grade.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Beverly is a wonderful character
Review: After having read her books in my childhood, it was a great pleasure to read this and "A Girl from Yamhill." Beverly makes her life story every bit as lively and interesting as her fiction books are. These volumes definitely solidified my esteem for Mrs. Cleary.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A PLEASURE
Review: After reading A Girl From Yamhill, I had to read the next volume of Cleary's memoirs right away, and it is even better! I just graduated from college and am heading off into the "real world," so her story of perseverance and triumph really hits home. I cried tears of joy for Cleary's accomplishments by the end of this book. "She did it!" I thought. My Own Two Feet would make a great gift for anybody who might need a little extra motivation; it's a written testimony to the fact that dreams do come true with a lot of hard work.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wonderful Autobiography by a Great Children's Author
Review: I bought this book for my daugher, who is 11, and ended up reading it from cover to cover myself. I learned a great deal about what a college education meant to an earlier generation. I appreciated seeing Ms. Cleary's development as someone who understood children. In addition, I related to her relationship with her mother because my mother behaved similarly as I grew into an independent person.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Sad to see it end
Review: I have 26 more pg. to read, & I don't want this book to end. I am enjoying seeing parts of Mrs. Cleary's life in her fiction books. I now want to re-read all my Ramona books.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Highly enjoyable window to the past.
Review: I loved Beverly Cleary's fictional books when I was a boy. More recently, I enjoyed reading her first memoir "A Girl from Yamhill." Therefore, I just had to read her second memoir, "My Own Two Feet" which chronicles her life through college, her work as a librarian, her marriage, and the beginning of her life as a children's author. I loved it! It not only provides a wonderful insight into the mindset and character of its author; but also presents a vivid, sometimes very nostalgic, look at life in the 30's and 40's. It describes an America that has disappeared. A college social life that revolved around a seemingly endless number of dances and a strict code of decorum on how young women should dress and act. A small town opposed to the idea of having two married librarians since jobs were so scarce during the Depression that it was considered fair enough for just the husband to have a job. Also as a Catholic, I was amused by Beverly's parents' opposition to her marriage to Clarence Cleary simply because he was Catholic.

There's also some fun information for the fans of her fictional books. Readers will learn how Ribsy and Ramona got their names and what was Mrs. Cleary's original ending to "Henry Huggins." It's also interesting to note that the character of Ramona Quimby, which is arguably Mrs. Cleary's most beloved, was created simply as an afterthought to keep all her characters from being only children. I absolutely loved this book, and was disappointed it was so short!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Highly enjoyable window to the past.
Review: I loved Beverly Cleary's fictional books when I was a boy. More recently, I enjoyed reading her first memoir "A Girl from Yamhill." Therefore, I just had to read her second memoir, "My Own Two Feet" which chronicles her life through college, her work as a librarian, her marriage, and the beginning of her life as a children's author. I loved it! It not only provides a wonderful insight into the mindset and character of its author; but also presents a vivid, sometimes very nostalgic, look at life in the 30's and 40's. It describes an America that has disappeared. A college social life that revolved around a seemingly endless number of dances and a strict code of decorum on how young women should dress and act. A small town opposed to the idea of having two married librarians since jobs were so scarce during the Depression that it was considered fair enough for just the husband to have a job. Also as a Catholic, I was amused by Beverly's parents' opposition to her marriage to Clarence Cleary simply because he was Catholic.

There's also some fun information for the fans of her fictional books. Readers will learn how Ribsy and Ramona got their names and what was Mrs. Cleary's original ending to "Henry Huggins." It's also interesting to note that the character of Ramona Quimby, which is arguably Mrs. Cleary's most beloved, was created simply as an afterthought to keep all her characters from being only children. I absolutely loved this book, and was disappointed it was so short!


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