The average rating for The right road based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.
Review # 1 was written on 2020-02-08 00:00:00 Phil Bergen Not sure how I feel about this Gentile. First off, it is very much the level of authoritarianism and egocentrism that bothers the Right unless it's coming out of Trump's mouth. Ironically, who do the Right bring up in their red fascist argument? Gentile. Secondly, his point about education is as uncomfortable as it is interesting. While I can vibe with his whole idea that it's a problem solving task, I don't like the idea that education is an antinomy regarding personal freedom. Can't believe I've held onto this for as long as I have. It was a disappointment. |
Review # 2 was written on 2020-09-17 00:00:00 Judith Doop This book is assigned 398 by LOC as traditional literature. It would be considered a pourquoi - a story that explains the origins of natural traits. There is little to no attribution of sources: the end flap merely states that the author's "acquaintance with the many tales of Why the Tides Ebb and Flow . . . stirred her to tell this one." Printed on tan paper, with a border of brown and black, the line drawings evoke images from long ago. This is the story of a woman who asks the Sky Spirit for a rock to shelter her from the weather. Not thinking, the Sky Spirit tells her to take one. The one she takes is the rock from the hole in the bottom of the sea. The Sky Spirit sends a dog, a girl and and a young man to try to fill the hole, but ultimately must allow the old woman to take it twice a day to put in her garden. Hence, the tides. |
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