The tales and poems held between the pages of Dance with Your Heart are filled with inspirations, lessons, and magic. Most of the stories take no more than a few minutes to read, and yet they allow the reader to discover and visit worlds never before visited. Inch alongside a tiny snail as she goes through a journey of self-discovery in The Gift of Uniqueness, and learn that cooperation is the key to working successfully, yielding desirable fruits in the story, The Raging Sun and Rain. The poems range from thought-provoking to inspirational; their language is simple yet lyrical, and they are written with sincerity, clarity, and that rarest
commodity: wisdom.
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By Eugenia Sokolskaya
Aug 11, 2009
"From another Lulu author" I don't want to sound redundant, but this is amazing! Although you can't really tell what's happening at the very beginning, but that's a plus! It's no fun to read a book where everything is given to you straight out. And the preview is done really well: I'd really like to know what will happen next. It really helps starting authors like me to read good books like yours!
Reviews by Malcolm R. Campbell, Campbell Editorial Services The enchanting tales and poems in this book dance on the page. They are well written and exuberant. With a gentle touch, they inspire and teach profound life lessons in the manner of mythic tales and fables. After stories such as "The Greedy Cat" and "The Dishonest Fox" bring a knowing smile to your face, they will delight your children and grandchildren through multiple readings. And Each of these delicate, well-written little stories reads like a folk tale or a fable. They remind me of the stories my parents read to me when I was young, for they are filled with exuberant writing and exciting characters and a gentle life's lesson at the end. Cheng, a survivor of severe juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, spent the first eleven years of her life in wheelchairs, hospitals and pain. She lost her sight in the 10th grade. However, if these stories are a fair indicator of the author behind the words in this... More > book--and I think that they are--Cheng sees quite well without her eyes and has a remarkable spirit.< Less