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Title: The Princess Principle: Women Helping Women Discover Their Royal Spirit by Janna L. High, Marilyn Sprague-Smith, Jana L. High, Lorri Allen ISBN: 0-9714933-1-6 Publisher: Rawdon & Watson Pub. Date: 05 November, 2002 Format: Paperback Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $20.00 |
Average Customer Rating: 5 (17 reviews)
Rating: 5
Summary: Finding Inspiration to Overcome Your Obsticles in Life
Comment: The stories in this book not only showed me others have overcome obstacles but also that I to have the ability to overcome my obstacle to a happy and joy filled life. Every real life stories in this book, especially Marilyn Sprague-Smith's story, showed me with the willingness to change your present circumstances and finding your internal strengths everyone can overcome their problems and impediments, and they can grow and prosper in a happy and joyful life. Reading and growing an understanding of these courageous women's stories are certainly life changing catalyst for both women and men. Everyday self help book appear in book stores, but rarely do you find a book like this that actually inspires people to change their lives.
Rating: 5
Summary: ..Cover to Cover Reader-Man..
Comment: I was looking for a new book to give to my wife whom was down in spirit as our oldest left home after graduation. Well, I was impressed with this book by Jana High and Marilyn Sprague-Smith.
I read it too, on advice from my better half. The Princess Principle is a fresh interpretation on understanding and listening to one's own values, personal worth and self esteem system. The authors left me with clues and guidance on how to stay on top of the everyday life journey and how to place the bigger picture in daily focus through the road hazards ahead. I normally read astronomy and other science books but this was a great change for me.
Rating: 5
Summary: A New Cinderella Story
Comment: Reviewed by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, award-winning author of This is the Place and Harkening: A Collection of Stories Remembered
Lately we've seen lots of movies that trade on a little girl's desire to grow up to be cared for by a handsome prince. That includes The Princess Diaries, Maid in Manhattan and other Cinderella stories that pretend to have an up-to-date twist for the modern woman. We have fashion designers exploiting women's desire for the glass slipper with five inch heels that will trash her posture and disintegrate her spine. Now we have The Princess Principle but it is not part of a trend toward exploitation.
Instead it is full of essays by eighteen women who share their hope, joy and expertise. The title may attract the very woman who needs it. It is an authentic inducement because our culture has made the idea of being a princess a part of our psyches that we might as well turn to our advantage.
The editors, Jana L. High and Marilyn Sprague-Smith, M. Ed., have assembled literate, well educated women with different stories and different angles on how we might improve ourselves and still live with-even accept-what now may appear to be our natural urge to be a princess. For these women, The Princess Principle isn't about being rescued; they know we are beautiful and important in the ways that count.
As a writer considering my own anthology I must also comment on the format of this book. It is rare among anthologies. It gives each contributor full and complete billing including her name on the front cover, her picture on the back. It is also careful to credential each author so the reader has a sense for who each of them is and how she might best approach that writer's views.
This book might even be a resource for readers because some of the authors act as coaches, therapists, or advisors in real life.
In the spirit of this exceptional format here are the contributors:
Lorri Allen
Sue Bergstrom M.Ed.
Julie D. Burch
Jennifer Curtet
Deb Gauldin, RN
Sheryl Rudd Kuhn, MRR
Carolyn L. Larkin
Janet Luongo, M.S.Ed.
Joyce C. Mils, Ph.D.
Rebecca Pace
Lori Palm
Vickie Pokaluk
Valerie A Rawls
Sheryl Roush
Sue Stanek, Ph.D.
Amy S. Tolbert, Ph.D.
My bet is that not one of these women is a princess in the traditional sense and that every one of them is a princess in the sense she is making her own way, happily and with self assurance, in this big, bad but wonderful world.
(Carolyn Howard-Johnson's first novel, This is the Place, has won eight awards. Her newly released Harkening: A Collection of Stories Remember has won three. Her new book of poetry , Skyscapes: A Woman's View,is looking for a home.)
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