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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Jane E GriffioenPublisher: Wipf & Stock Publishers Imprint: Wipf & Stock Publishers Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.513kg ISBN: 9781725267565ISBN 10: 172526756 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 25 May 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback 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 ContentsReviewsWith poetry and humor Jane Griffioen tours London Street, where an immigrant world is both held together and strangled by rules. Her eye is keen and loving, as she introduces us to an old-fashioned father who gave himself to his family and worked himself to the bone for their survival. She allows us to meet her mother, a woman tormented by judgment and held in a prison of secrets. Into all of this Jane brings honesty and light, as she shares a story in which depravity is inescapable and grace irresistible. --Mary VanderGoot, author of Broken Glass and The Maggie Barnes Trilogy Jane Griffioen's London Street is one of the finest portraits of family life I have ever read. On London Street, in the heart of a Christian Reformed Dutch-American enclave, the too-frequent reminders that we are not like God are examined by a very curious girl named Janie, who grows up trying to solve all the big puzzles of family life--love and betrayal, coping with loss, and faith. We share both Janie's joys and sorrows in this startlingly intimate examination of a family that we all recognize, at least in part. This fabulous book should not be missed and is a must-read for book clubs! --D. E. Johnson, author of The Detroit Electric Scheme This memoir of growing up in a Calvinist enclave on the southwest side of Grand Rapids in the fifties and sixties focuses on a family whose life turns out to be complex in all the ways that readers find fascinating. The narrator, a very observant young girl, becomes a young woman intent on making sense of her family's suffering and her father's dogged belief system. Jane Griffioen pays close attention to time and place and detail. She pulls no punches; at the same time, her story shows loving concern for her family, herself, and her community. --James Vanden Bosch, Professor of English, Calvin College Why is it sometimes so hard to learn the truth from those we love the most? Young Janie discovers why. As did I, reading London Street. Her story, her education, will stay with me a long time. --Vic Foerster, arborist and author of Naked in the Stream """With poetry and humor Jane Griffioen tours London Street, where an immigrant world is both held together and strangled by rules. Her eye is keen and loving, as she introduces us to an old-fashioned father who gave himself to his family and worked himself to the bone for their survival. She allows us to meet her mother, a woman tormented by judgment and held in a prison of secrets. Into all of this Jane brings honesty and light, as she shares a story in which depravity is inescapable and grace irresistible."" --Mary VanderGoot, author of Broken Glass and The Maggie Barnes Trilogy ""Jane Griffioen's London Street is one of the finest portraits of family life I have ever read. On London Street, in the heart of a Christian Reformed Dutch-American enclave, the too-frequent reminders that we are not like God are examined by a very curious girl named Janie, who grows up trying to solve all the big puzzles of family life--love and betrayal, coping with loss, and faith. We share both Janie's joys and sorrows in this startlingly intimate examination of a family that we all recognize, at least in part. This fabulous book should not be missed and is a must-read for book clubs!"" --D. E. Johnson, author of The Detroit Electric Scheme ""This memoir of growing up in a Calvinist enclave on the southwest side of Grand Rapids in the fifties and sixties focuses on a family whose life turns out to be complex in all the ways that readers find fascinating. The narrator, a very observant young girl, becomes a young woman intent on making sense of her family's suffering and her father's dogged belief system. Jane Griffioen pays close attention to time and place and detail. She pulls no punches; at the same time, her story shows loving concern for her family, herself, and her community."" --James Vanden Bosch, Professor of English, Calvin College ""Why is it sometimes so hard to learn the truth from those we love the most? Young Janie discovers why. As did I, reading London Street. Her story, her education, will stay with me a long time."" --Vic Foerster, arborist and author of Naked in the Stream" Author InformationJane E. Griffioen earned her BA from Calvin College with majors in theology and English. She has published poetry and essays in Elysian Fields, 3288 Review, Perspectives, Mars Hill Review, and other journals. She lives in Grand Rapids, Michigan, where she was born and raised. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |