Wings of an Angel
By Angel Logan
Xlibris Corporation (2003)
Reviewed by Beverly Pechin for Reader Views (3/06)

The moment I saw “Wings of an Angel” I knew it was simply a gift,
waiting to be given to someone special. The light lavender cover and
art work send out a feeling of immediate relaxation. You open the
cover to find even more beauty inside. Short, eclectic prose blesses the
pages alongside coordinating colored art work that is quite beautiful and
creative. It seems as much thought went into the art work of the book
as the writing and the two combine together to give you the gift of
prose that will simply calm.

I see this book as a perfect gift for events when you’re not quite sure
what to give. Any spiritual gatherings where perhaps your faith isn’t
quite the same and you don’t feel comfortable giving something of their
faith, yet want to still bless them with something touching. Perhaps the
birth of a child, when the parent’s need a special gift to let them know
they’re special. Mother’s day, birthdays, any day that you simply want
to tell someone they’re special and thought of and need to take the time
themselves to enjoy a little peace with the world.

While it is a book of angels and finding oneself, it’s not a sappy
religious view that overwhelms the reader with issues and provoking
thoughts. Instead it has a calming effect, much like a warm lavender
filled tub does at the end of a stressful day. One of my favorite poems
in the book was “At Paradise Cafe”, with it’s ending verse that says
“Paradise Cafe is the place within your heart where music rings the
song of hope…” That particular poem reminds oneself of how
important YOU are, as you sit at the Paradise Cafe across from
yourself, for a moment to look deep within and make discoveries.

“Wings of an Angel” is a beautiful collection of poetry that gently
relaxes one from the inside out and somehow within it’s few pages of
beauty can bring you to an inner peace each time you open it. An
absolute work of beauty.

Beverly Pechin is a reviewer for Reader Views
http://www.readerviews.com

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He Said, She Said
Ken Klarfeld & Jasmyn Klarfeld
iUniverse (2005)
Reviewed by Beverly Pechin for Reader Views (3/06)

This is not another “How to Raise Your Kids” Instruction Book, written by those who have no children but all the knowledge of raising them because they read about it in some text book. I tire easily of those with degrees in child rearing who have never experienced the actual thing first hand, so my expectations when first looking at this type of book weren’t that high. I figured ” Great, another know it all doctor who is going to tell you how to raise your kids”; instead I began reading a true parent’s ordeal with raising a daughter who began her life well-adjusted and nearly ‘perfect’ only to find nothing but a troubled life ahead.

The book is written in two perspectives, the father’s and then the daughter’s. Each chapter deals with a new step in the daughter’s life as she grows but from the very beginning you see how quickly the adult’s version of what happened differs from the child’s. It gives you a whole new insight to what it’s like growing up in a broken/mixed family. In what seems to be today’s ” norm” of divorce and step-parents. While everything seemed perfect from the parent’s stand-point, the child tells her views on how she felt during these times. She shows aspects of how everyday life isn’t so every day when you’re a child. What I loved most was, this young lady was not a troubled child. She was every parent’s dream in the beginning. She excelled in her studies, had good solid friendships and was raised in a loving atmosphere. Somehow, she still took a wrong turn and the insight this book provides helps you see where those turns were. It’s like child-rearing 101, but with hindsight. From a parent’s perspective, it’s what we all wish we had known before hand.

Ken was a divorced father of two young children. He was in a relationship with a woman who was a drug abuser and for obvious reasons decided to remove himself and his children from the situation. He knew from the beginning that the relationship wasn’t good anyways, they fought constantly and he was never really happy but, like so many, thought kids would help solve the problem. Instead, the obvious happened and Ken found himself a single dad raising a son and a daughter.

Ken quickly found another love and remarried fairly soon after the divorce. His kids were still young, often a time when many single parents think it’s best to begin a blended family because “the kids are young and it’s just like a new family anyways”. What we find by reading this book is that this is often not the case. Jasmyn, his oldest daughter, often expresses how hard it was for her as the child to belong to 2 mothers. She also expresses that she often felt like she was not her step-mother’s but she was her father’s, often creating turmoil within herself with these thoughts. Whether her parent’s felt this way or not was of no bearing, what mattered is how her own mind adjusted to living in what we today call a “mixed family”. It wasn’t obvious until somewhat later, after her baby years that this mindset took place and the problems began.

The book follows the life of a young girl who never seems to find happiness and parents (step-parents) who can’t seem to do enough to “help” but perhaps help too much. Again, the hindsight is that they should have allowed her to make choices, come to them for help before they simply bailed her out. Loosing life’s lessons, this young seemingly perfect girl made all the wrong turns and became every parent’s nightmare. The book shows each turning point and stage of Jasmyn’s life and how both she and her father viewed it; often two completely different outtakes. We watch her twist and turn, taking wrong road after wrong road and as parent’s look and say ” well, I probably would have done the same thing” and THAT is where the purpose of the book comes in.

To sum it up, the book is a true account of a young girl growing up with wrong decisions. Growing up in what we would consider a perfect, loving family but we find what seems good on the outside, isn’t always good inside. We get to look back on this family’s life and have hindsight to raising a young, troubled teen. We get to see that even the most perfect of children can make the wrong choices and we, as parents, can sometimes help in making those choices even when we don’t know it. It’s a book of truth and honesty without the fear of looking bad. Most amazingly it is a way for both parents and teens to see a true view of growing up and learn from the mistakes of someone else.

I think the authors accomplished what they meant to do, give us an understanding of child rearing from a realistic perspective and their ability to admit their own mistakes helps us to see ours before they occur. I would recommend it to anyone even thinking of having children, not to scare them away from this glorious decision but to give them a head start of child rearing with hindsight before they even begin. Teens could benefit from this book simply because they would not only relate to the girls feelings during these times but can see what her decisions did to her life. It’s a wonderful life’s lesson, summed up in a couple hundred pages; something most of us wish we could do ahead of time and now we finally have the chance to learn from it in another perspective.

Beverly Pechin is a reviewer for Reader Views
http://www.readerviews.com

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