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∎ Read The Borning Room (Audible Audio Edition) Paul Fleischman Jeanine Kane Inc Blackstone Audio Books

The Borning Room (Audible Audio Edition) Paul Fleischman Jeanine Kane Inc Blackstone Audio Books



Download As PDF : The Borning Room (Audible Audio Edition) Paul Fleischman Jeanine Kane Inc Blackstone Audio Books

Download PDF  The Borning Room (Audible Audio Edition) Paul Fleischman Jeanine Kane Inc Blackstone Audio Books

Mothers give birth in the borning room. The dying take their departure there. Outside the Lott family's Ohio farmhouse, the Civil War rages, slavery falls, and the world marvels at the wonder of electricity. Inside, within the walls of the borning room, Georgina Lott will experience her life's greatest turnings. Across the years, she discovers womanhood and first love, experiences the mourning that comes with loss, and, as did her mother and grandmother, at last takes her place in the room as another precious life is about to begin.


The Borning Room (Audible Audio Edition) Paul Fleischman Jeanine Kane Inc Blackstone Audio Books

I love this book I read it in High School and just recently re-read it again and I am now in my 30's. Its a very simple book about a very simple time, it reads very quickly. My favorite part of the book is the very first chapter.

Product details

  • Audible Audiobook
  • Listening Length 2 hours and 20 minutes
  • Program Type Audiobook
  • Version Unabridged
  • Publisher Blackstone Audio, Inc.
  • Audible.com Release Date July 1, 2013
  • Whispersync for Voice Ready
  • Language English, English
  • ASIN B00DGZ9674

Read  The Borning Room (Audible Audio Edition) Paul Fleischman Jeanine Kane Inc Blackstone Audio Books

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The Borning Room (Audible Audio Edition) Paul Fleischman Jeanine Kane Inc Blackstone Audio Books Reviews


"The Borning Room" is a superb historical novel by Paul Fleischman. The title refers to a room in a rural Ohio house where babies are born. The story is told by a first person narrator Georgina Lott, who is born in 1851. Georgina's story spans from the time of her birth to the era of World War I.
With compassion and insight, Fleishman covers the cycles of life, death, and rebirth in Georgina's family as the decades pass. Through his characters Fleischman explores many important themes and events in American history the abolitionist movement and the "underground Railroad," the Civil War, women's suffrage, folk medicine, ethnic diversity, and more. Benjamin Franklin's writings emerge as oft-cited texts for Georgina's family.
I was particularly interested by Fleischman's depiction of the increasing religious and spiritual diversity of the U. S. in the late 19th century. Some of his characters are religious nonconformists, or are interested in spiritualism. Fleischman is, I believe, historically accurate here. The 19th century was a time of great religious nonconformity and experimentation in the U.S. To better appreciate this aspect of Fleischman's fictional family portrait, consider the poems of Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson, the essays of Ralph Waldo Emerson, or the spread of new religious movements like Mormonism and Christian Science in the 19th century.
Fleischman writes in a starkly beautiful prose, and has populated Georgina's world with some truly wonderful characters. Georgina herself is a memorable creation. She is, in my opinion, a "soul sister" to many other great female characters in American literature Zora Neale Hurston's Janie (from "Their Eyes Were Watching God"), Willa Cather's Alexandra (from "O Pioneers!"), and many more. I highly recommend "The Borning Room."
The Borning Room is about a woman named Georgina telling about her life. When she was little she struggled with the idea of her mom having another baby after she had her. She thought that you got pregnant by swallowing a water melon seed.
One day Georgia was walking through the woods and stumbled upon an old African American woman named Cora. She was a slave. Back then it was illegal to hide runaway slaves but Georgina didn't care. She took Cora back to her barn and gave her new clothes which she stole from her mother and her sister.
One day when her father was away with her grandfather, her mother went into birth. Georginas mother sent her sister to fetch the doctor who lived far away, leaving Georgina to take care of the mother. For some reason the baby wasn't coming out so Georgina ran out side to get Cora for help. Cora delivered the baby boy safely just as the father , grand father, and sister returned. Georgina felt that she was a big part in having the baby so she took care of it very well. His name was Zeb. Her father and grandfather took Cora safely to the water to go to Canada.
A couple years later, Georgina and Grandfather had a spiritual "church service" in they're back yard. Shortly after that grandfather died. They family was very depressed but tried they're hardest to move on.
Three years later, when the only children left in the house was Georgina and Zeb and they're older sister, Georginas mother had gotten pregnant again. This time they didn't use Mrs. Radtke for the doctor, like they had used every other time. Instead, they used a young doctor who had medicine for labor pain. He made everyone leave the room. This made Georgina angry because she had helped with Zebs birth and she wanted to help with this one too. SO she snuck to see through the window and to her surprise she saw her mother lying on the bed...dead. The first baby died but there was still another one in her stomach and the doctor didn't even know. It was Georginas aunt who saw this. From then on she thought of the baby as her own.
Years passed on slowly. Luciella, the older sister had gotten married and left. Then one day Zeb and the baby had gotten sick. The baby cured but Zeb was still very sickly. His teacher who was staying with them for a while helped bring him back to health. Shortly after Georgina and him got married. Georgina had children of her own, and of course, her doctor was Mrs.Radtke.
I think The Borning Room was a very well written book. It was very interesting once you start getting to the middle because that is when more intriguing things start to happen like the mother having a baby and what not. I thought that the beginning was a little boring for me because it didn't have very much fun and exciting things happening yet. It was basically just her introducing characters and her self but once i got into the book I enjoyed it alot!! I would reccomend this book to any girl form ages 10 and up because some things younger girls wouldn't understand and i don't think boys would like it very much.
I think the theme of The Borning Room was that life goes on no matter what may happen on while your living it.
I loved this book! It is the story of Georgina Lott, a farm girl from Ohio who tells the tale of her free-thinking family from the Civil War through the Great War. (You find out to whom she is telling the tale, but I won't spoil it.)

This book is not an action-packed, adventure-filled, roller coaster ride. It is an ordinary story of an girl who is extraordinarily insightful. She lives a simple life on the farm, but makes discoveries about the truly important things in life through her relationship with her family members her mother, her grandfather, her brother, and later on, her husband.

The only warnings I would give to those of you who plan to recommend this novel to middle-school readers is that it contains graphic birth and death scenes, so you may have some explaining to do. It also has a free-thinking grandfather who chooses to follow his own doctrine instead of that of a church. Some people may find this offensive. That being said, the events are very tastefully written and a good way to open a dialogue with children.

If you value family above all else, this is the novel for you.
I love this book I read it in High School and just recently re-read it again and I am now in my 30's. Its a very simple book about a very simple time, it reads very quickly. My favorite part of the book is the very first chapter.
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