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result(s) for
"Reunions."
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Memory and oblivion
Paloma Sâanchez-Garnica's first novel to be translated into English is a beautiful, harrowing, and illuminating story of family betrayals and a last chance for forgiveness.
Somewhere out there : a novel
\"What happens when two sisters who were torn apart when their young mother abandoned them and grew up in tragically different circumstances reunite thirty-five years later to find her?\"-- Provided by publisher.
Symbol of Remembrance: The Vacant Chair
by
Topping, Elizabeth A
in
Reunions
2023
Trade Publication Article
The relatives came
by
Rylant, Cynthia author
,
Gammell, Stephen illustrator
in
Families Juvenile fiction.
,
Family reunions Juvenile fiction.
1993
The relatives come to visit from Virginia and everyone has a wonderful time.
The returned
2013
When their son Jacob, who died tragically at his 8th birthday party in 1966, arrives on their doorstep, still 8 years old, Harold and Lucille Hargrave must navigate a strange new reality as chaos erupts around the world as people's loved ones are returned from beyond.
Graduate reunions
in
Reunions
2014
Robin Hargreaves, BVA senior vice-president, shares his thoughts on why graduate reunions are important.
Journal Article
Remembering the Civil War
2013,2016
As early as 1865, survivors of the Civil War were acutely aware that people were purposefully shaping what would be remembered about the war and what would be omitted from the historical record. InRemembering the Civil War, Caroline E. Janney examines how the war generation--men and women, black and white, Unionists and Confederates--crafted and protected their memories of the nation's greatest conflict. Janney maintains that the participants never fully embraced the reconciliation so famously represented in handshakes across stone walls. Instead, both Union and Confederate veterans, and most especially their respective women's organizations, clung tenaciously to their own causes well into the twentieth century.Janney explores the subtle yet important differences between reunion and reconciliation and argues that the Unionist and Emancipationist memories of the war never completely gave way to the story Confederates told. She challenges the idea that white northerners and southerners salved their war wounds through shared ideas about race and shows that debates about slavery often proved to be among the most powerful obstacles to reconciliation.