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Overview"""Elizabeth Ellis's words jump off the page and into the secret part of your heart where you keep treasured memories and sacred feelings. She sings to you of her life and the lives of others with whom she intersects. Compassionate and thought provoking, an Appalachian/Texan with a whole-world point of view with a little rabble rousing thrown in, Elizabeth Ellis is a true master of the written and spoken word."" --Robin Bady, Storyteller, Arts Educator, Brooklyn, New York" Full Product DetailsAuthor: Elizabeth Ellis (Senior Lecturer, School of Physiotherapy, The University of Sidney, Sidney, Australia)Publisher: Parkhurst Brothers Publishers Inc Imprint: Parkhurst Brothers Publishers Inc Dimensions: Width: 13.70cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 21.30cm Weight: 0.181kg ISBN: 9781624910401ISBN 10: 1624910408 Pages: 134 Publication Date: 01 September 2014 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsPerfectly paced, often amusing, always memorable stories, subtitled A storyteller's memoir, is a slim but enriching collection of Ms. Ellis's experiences as they relate to different American holidays. --MK Turner for Bookreviews.com In the forty-some-years of the (so-called) American storytelling revival, Elizabeth Ellis has been one of our most treasured truth tellers. Here she tells her own truths - some full of hope and others hard to hear. But in the hearing or the reading of these narratives, we are called to resilience, generosity, wisdom and love. --Milbre Burch, storyteller and workshop leader, Columbia, MO Elizabeth Ellis is a storyteller who touches her audience in such a deep, caring way that you can almost hear them sigh, let out a deep breath and think to themselves, 'she knows.' We have all waited for a long time for these wonderful stories of the human spirit and its triumph to be published and the wait is over thanks to Parkhurst Brothers. --Dan Keding, Circle of Excellence storyteller and author, Urbana, Illinois Author Information"I grew up in the Appalachian Mountains of Tennessee and Kentucky. Because my Father died in World War Two, my Grandfather was an active force in my life. My Mother moved us to Tennessee to grow up in the house in which my Father had been born. Every day that school was closed for two days in a row, we went ""home"". That was always the home of my Mother's parents in Kentucky. I was a child who lived mostly in my own head. I never stopped talking, a great cross for my Mother to bear. Most of my closest friends were imaginary. On one level, that is still true today. The greatest influence on me as a child was Dr. Orvel Calhoun Crowder, the minister of the church across the street from my house in Tennessee. He introduced me to the world of books and the life of the spirit. After getting an undergraduate degree in English and History from Milligan College, I received my Masters in Education from East Tennessee State University. I came to Dallas to work for the Dallas Public Library as a Children's Librarian, a position I kept for a decade. In 1978, my old friend Gayle Ross and I made a trip to the Appalachian Mountains to attend the National Storytelling Festival. We met Jackie Torrance, David Holt, Donald Davis and the Folktellers, along with others who called themselves storytellers. On the way back to Dallas, ""We could do that!"" became ""I will if you will!"" We came home to Dallas and began plans to become professional storytellers. We worked as a duo, as The Twelve Moon Storytellers, for about four years or so. But, making a living large enough to support both families was extremely challenging, so eventually we each began solo careers. Making my living as a storyteller has been a great honor and a great joy. I have gotten to tell throughout the United States and Canada at festivals and conferences. A few years ago, I was invited to come to New Zealand to share my stories. In the last thirty-two years, I have told to more than a million school children. I have received the John Henry Faulk Award from the Tejas Storytelling Association and the Circle of Excellence Award from the National Storytelling Network. Each of these is a great honor, but the greatest honor is when anyone takes the time to listen. If there is anything I enjoy more than telling stories, it is teaching other people to tell. I present workshops at conferences, intensives in people's homes, as well as teaching in university settings. Helping other tellers develop stronger skills and deeper artistic lives is my highest accomplishment...except for raising my children and grandchildren, of course." Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |