Tag: Likeness

Likeness Fathers, Sons, a Portrait


Free Download David MacFarlane, "Likeness: Fathers, Sons, a Portrait"
English | 2021 | ISBN: 0385693710, 0385693737 | EPUB | pages: 240 | 1.5 mb
From the author of the classic The Danger Tree comes a powerful new memoir about a father’s love for his dying son-a heart-wrenching but ultimately life-affirming book about fatherhood and identity, love and grief, memory and healing.When the worst that can happen, happens, the only useful lesson is the knowledge that it can. That’s the a world can actually end, time can actually run out, sadness can prevail. But I didn’t know that then, of course. Or, if I knew it, I didn’t really believe it.In David Macfarlane’s living room, there hangs a life-size portrait of himself. The portrait, by esteemed Canadian painter John Hartman, has become a portal for when he stares into his own eyes, and into the painting’s background, an aerial view of his childhood house and hometown of Hamilton, he is transported. The painting evokes vivid memories of what was, what is no more and what will never be. It brings David back to his happy, privileged youth-its depiction of his parents’ old swimming pool surrounded by dazzlingly bright light reminds him of how his future felt during those days, when the world seemed full of possibilities. His son Blake’s future should feel just as bright. He’s young. He’s fit. He isn’t a smoker. And he really, really wants to create, to live. And yet he’s confined to a bed in a bright, white room-as bright as the air surrounding the swimming pool, and yet so different. As Blake undergoes treatment for an aggressive cancer, his father reckons with his past and the future his son may never have.In achingly beautiful prose, and with profound insight into how we love and grieve and remember, Macfarlane mourns the passing of time as a man in the autumn of his life and as a father who is losing his son. Likeness is a book about fathers and sons that demonstrates the power of memory to transform the tragic into the precious and profound. From the author of the classic The Danger Tree comes a powerful new memoir about a father’s love for his dying son-a heart-wrenching but ultimately life-affirming book about fatherhood and identity, love and grief, memory and healing.When the worst that can happen, happens, the only useful lesson is the knowledge that it can. That’s the a world can actually end, time can actually run out, sadness can prevail. But I didn’t know that then, of course. Or, if I knew it, I didn’t really believe it.In David Macfarlane’s living room, there hangs a life-size portrait of himself. The portrait, by esteemed Canadian painter John Hartman, has become a portal for when he stares into his own eyes, and into the painting’s background, an aerial view of his childhood house and hometown of Hamilton, he is transported. The painting evokes vivid memories of what was, what is no more and what will never be. It brings David back to his happy, privileged youth-its depiction of his parents’ old swimming pool surrounded by dazzlingly bright light reminds him of how his future felt during those days, when the world seemed full of possibilities. His son Blake’s future should feel just as bright. He’s young. He’s fit. He isn’t a smoker. And he really, really wants to create, to live. And yet he’s confined to a bed in a bright, white room-as bright as the air surrounding the swimming pool, and yet so different. As Blake undergoes treatment for an aggressive cancer, his father reckons with his past and the future his son may never have.In achingly beautiful prose, and with profound insight into how we love and grieve and remember, Macfarlane mourns the passing of time as a man in the autumn of his life and as a father who is losing his son. Likeness is a book about fathers and sons that demonstrates the power of memory to transform the tragic into the precious and profound.

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An Exact Likeness The Portraits of John Wesley


Free Download Richard P. Heitzenrater, "An Exact Likeness: The Portraits of John Wesley"
English | 2016 | pages: 128 | ISBN: 1501816608 | EPUB | 7,6 mb
Faces are more than a montage of organs that see, breathe, speak, hear, eat, sing, smell, and yell. As Josephine Tey points out in her mystery novel, The Daughter of Time, the slant of an eyebrow, the set of a mouth, the look of the eye, the firmness of a chin, often can provide evidence of character that is as telling as a report card or a police blotter. Those features depicted on portraits of individuals can be equally telling of the person’s inner nature or perhaps of what the artist thinks (or wants the viewer to think) about the person being portrayed. Sometimes a portrait might be even more useful than a biography.

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