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Dreamspeaker |
List Price: $5.95
Your Price: $5.95 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
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Rating: Summary: An alternative view of what psychiatry calls mental illness Review: I first read this book ten years ago and instanlty loved it. I took my time about buying a copy, and it went out of print. I'm correcting that mistake today! The book is about a boy who, from time to time, experiences what modern mainstream psychiatry would call psychotic events (not to imply that those people could ever agree upon a diagnosis). He has had contact with social services and the mental health profession...no luck. He then runs into a native shaman. One of the definitions of "shaman" in the dictionary I have here is: one who "divines the hidden." The shaman teaches the boy that his episodes are not symptoms of mental illness, but symptoms of being one of "the chosen." If you think street people are crazy, if you think crazy people should be at least fixed, and probably locked-up in the process, if you own stock in the drug company which make lithium...this book my help.
Rating: Summary: sad and sick ending Review: Iam a Sr.1 student and my class had to read Dreamspeaker.i read a head and finshed the book, after reading the book i was very depressed, and a wondered why would a teacher would tell a class 2 read some thing like this, it sends the message to youth that hey well if your not getting your way end it. it would have been a great boook if the ending wasnt so sad.
Rating: Summary: We are not all the same... Review: Over the last fourteen years, I have lent out each of the 8 copies of this novel that I have owned...I am still waiting to get ANY of them back. This is a simple (and short) story of a boy trying to find where he belongs and how modern day society, with its rules and regulations, keeps thwarting his efforts. This novel is an excellent expose of the frailties of a society ruled by bureaucracy and conformity, instead of common sense and compassion. It is also a superb metaphor for the alienation and suppression of self that is a result of our current society and its domination by "big businesses". This novel poignantly attests to the fact that we are not all the same and the same answer does not work for everyone. In many ways, this novel explores the same issues as Pink Floyd's classic album, "The Wall"
Rating: Summary: This book has the worst ending ever! Review: This is the worst possible book that they could be giving to teenagers to read. It simply teaches them that if things are not going there way then they can always kill themselves. This is not the sort of thing that schools should be premoting
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