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Dandelion Wine: A Novel (Grand Master Editions)

(Book #1 in the Green Town Series)

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$5.79
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Book Overview

For use in schools and libraries only. In the unusual world of Green Town, Illinois, a twelve-year-old discovers the wonders of reality and the power of imagination during the summer of 1928. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Not what I paid for or expected.

I was expecting the cute hardcover copy advertised in the picture and I paid the hardcover price. I ended up with one if the mass market paperback copies, I was very disappointed.

Excellent service

The book came in good condition and soon after ordering it. I am sold on the idea of ordering used books instead of paying for new.

Believe & Partake! or The Meaning of Life, a la Bradbury

I first read Ray Bradbury's miracle of a book, Dandelion Wine, when I was 16, and I have read it every year since. Over time I continue to gain a deeper appreciation for these lovely, strange, often magical vignettes (more properly parables, each one with a little implied moral) that explore the nature of happiness, the magic of love and, above all, what it means to be alive. To me, the overarching intent of the book is to remind all us adults that: * Being alive means maintaining a balance between Discoveries & Revelations and Ceremonies & Rites. Though the latter are important, binding us to our family & our community, our future & our past, it is Discoveries & Revelations that make us think, experience, change, and grow. * Being alive means living in the present. Even if this means giving away the tokens of a beloved past, as happens in one particularly poignant tale. * Being alive means being connected with the world - with family, neighbors, your community, the earth. It's no coincidence that the mysterious murderer haunting Douglas Spaulding's Childhood is called The Lonely One. * Being alive means being able to experience happiness ... not only understanding the nature of happiness, but possessing the wisdom not to let yourself be tricked into pursuing something that can't/won't make you happy. * Being alive means recognizing the presence of magic in our everyday lives. Because magic is out there ... in the spring of a new pair of tennis shoes, in the mysteries of love, in the essence of Dandelion Wine. Contrary to popular opinion, I do not believe Bradbury intended this to be a book about childhood. In fact, his 12yr old narrator, Douglas Spaulding, does not appear in many of the parables. I do think that Bradbury intentionally chose a child as his narrator, however, because children are inherently alive -- always discovering, always filled with wonder, connected to their family and the world and the present in ways that we begin gradually to forget as adults. Dandelion Wine is both nostalgia and a cautionary tale, challenging us to remember what it felt like to be alive and reminding us adults that - unless we take care - we may become so consumed by life that we forget to be alive. As far as I am concerned, this book is a little bit of magic in and of itself: part essence of childhood, part elixir of wisdom. Believe and partake!

Dandelion Wine Mentions in Our Blog

Dandelion Wine in Happy Birthday Mr. Bradbury!
Happy Birthday Mr. Bradbury!
Published by Ashly Moore Sheldon • August 21, 2019

On the eve of what would have been Ray Bradbury's 99th birthday, we celebrate the prolific author who passed away in 2012. A largely self-educated man, Bradbury wrote more than 30 books and close to 600 short stories.

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