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Marisha Chamberlain

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Marisha Chamberlain

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David Huddle, Alice Munro, Luigi Salerni, Tessa Hadley, Helen Simpson, ...more

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February 2009

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Marisha Chamberlain is a novelist, playwright, poet and librettist. Her debut novel, The Rose Variations, was published by Soho Press.Her plays have been staged all over the world: in South Africa, Germany, Australia, Turkey, Britain and Canada as well as in the United States. Scheherazade, a stage play, won the Dramatists Guild/CBS Regional and National Awards and in its teleplay version was broadcast across the United States and screened at the British Film Institute Festival. Her stage adaptation of Little Women was premiered by the Children’s Theater Company of Minneapolis and subsequently produced by the Stratford Ontario Festival Theater, Stage One of Louisville and Kansas City Repertory Theater.Her ballet, The Worn-Out Dancing Shoes, ...more

Average rating: 3.05 · 111 ratings · 25 reviews · 10 distinct works
The Rose Variations

3.04 avg rating — 93 ratings — published 2009 — 9 editions
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Little Women

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3.80 avg rating — 5 ratings
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Powers

liked it 3.00 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 1983
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Scheherazade.

2.50 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 1998 — 4 editions
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Little Women ~ One-Act Version

2.33 avg rating — 3 ratings
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Shout, applaud: Poems from ...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 1976
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Little Women (Full-length)

liked it 3.00 avg rating — 1 rating
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Little Women: A Drama

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Young Jane Eyre

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Rose Variations

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More books by Marisha Chamberlain…
Stag's Leap: Poems
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Rick     Hanson
“staying with a negative experience past the point that’s useful is like running laps in Hell: You dig the track a little deeper in your brain each time you go around it.”
Rick Hanson, Hardwiring Happiness: The New Brain Science of Contentment, Calm, and Confidence

Rick     Hanson
“By taking just a few extra seconds to stay with a positive experience—even the comfort in a single breath—you’ll help turn a passing mental state into lasting neural structure.”
Rick Hanson, Hardwiring Happiness: The New Brain Science of Contentment, Calm, and Confidence

Richard Russo
“What did I think? Right then I was thinking about my father, specifically his habit of treating everyone with courtesy and consideration, of how he used to stop on lower Division Street and converse genially with old black men from the Hill whom he knew from his early days as a route man. His kindness and interest weren't feigned, nor did they derive, I'm convinced, from any perceived send of duty. His behavior was merely an extension of who he was. But here's the thing about my father that I've come to understand only reluctantly and very recently. If he wasn't the cause of what ailed his fellow man, neither was he the solution. He believed in "Do unto Others." It was a good, indeed golden, rule to by and it never occurred to him that perhaps it wasn't enough. "You ain't gotta love people," I remember him proclaiming to the Elite Coffee Club guys at Ikey's back in the early days. Confused by mean-spirited behavior, he was forever explaining how little it cost to be polite, to be nice to people. Make them feel good then they're down because maybe tomorrow you'll be down. Such a small thing. Love, he seemed to understand, was a very big thing indeed, its cost enormous and maybe more than you could afford if you were spendthrift. Nobody expects that of you, asny more than they expected you to hand out hundred-dollar bills on the street corner.
And I remember my mother's response when he repeated over dinner what he'd told the men at the store. "Really, Lou? Isn't that exactly what we're supposed to do? Love people? Isn't that what the Bible says?”
Richard Russo, Bridge of Sighs

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