Average customer rating:
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A Wreath for Emmett Till (Boston Globe-Horn Book Honors (Awards))
Marilyn Nelson
Manufacturer: Houghton Mifflin
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Teens
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Hitler Youth (Bccb Blue Ribbon Nonfiction Book Award (Awards))
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Black Juice
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Getting Away with Murder (Jane Addams Honor Book (Awards))
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I Am the Messenger
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Day of Tears
ASIN: 0618397523 |
Book Description
In 1955, people all over the United States knew that Emmett Louis Till was a fourteen-year-old African American boy lynched for supposedly whistling at a white woman in Mississippi. The brutality of his murder, the open-casket funeral, and the acquittal of the men tried for the crime drew wide media attention. Award-winning poet Marilyn Nelson reminds us of the boy whose fate helped spark the civil rights movement. This martyr's wreath, woven from a little-known but sophisticated form of poetry, challenges us to speak out against modern-day injustices, to "speak what we see."
Average customer rating:
- Gorgeous, instructive book.
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Complete Book of Garlands, Circles & Decorative Wreaths
Fiona Barnett
Manufacturer: Lorenz Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Decorating
| Crafts & Hobbies
| Home & Garden
| Subjects
| Books
Flower Arranging
| Crafts & Hobbies
| Home & Garden
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General
| Crafts & Hobbies
| Home & Garden
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Wreathmaking
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Similar Items:
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Great American Wreaths: The Best of Martha Stewart Living
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Wreaths: Creative Ideas for the Year Round
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The Ultimate Wreath Book: Hundreds of Beautiful Wreaths to Make from Natural Materials
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Paula Pryke's Wreaths & Garlands
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Wreaths for Every Season
ASIN: 0754801799 |
Amazon.com
Wreaths and garlands take floral decorations out of the vase and into large-scale special-occasion decorating. Fresh and dried florals, greens, fruits, herbs, and other natural materials can be transformed into wall, door, tabletop, and mantel decor to welcome guests, mark a change of season, utilize a bountiful harvest, celebrate a holiday, or just brighten up a room. Hundreds of color photographs and step-by-step directions for well over a hundred projects fill this vast volume, along with a good introduction to materials, equipment, and techniques. A circlet of fresh flowers surrounds a bowl of floating candles; a swag of seashells and grasses graces a window; a ring of mosses and dried fungi commemorates a country stroll; lovely floral wreaths mark Valentine's Day, Easter, and Mother's Day. And of course there are Christmas decorations: a lush bay leaf and dried orange mantelpiece swag; a gold-flecked Yuletide kissing wreath; a lovely Advent candle ring. Complexity ranges from beginner to advanced--from novice wreath maker to expert, there's something here for everyone. --Amy Handy
Book Description
How to make beautifully individual floral garlands, circles, wreaths, candle rings and swags.
Customer Reviews:
Gorgeous, instructive book........2000-05-27
Absolutely lovely book- I've read as many wreath and garland books as I can get my hands on, and this book is superior to most. The quality of the photos and instructions, as well as the great variety of projects, materials, and quantities (of materials) used, contribute to the beauty of this book. I love their many ideas for roses, especially, and lavendar. Great book.
Average customer rating:
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Advent Arts and Christmas Crafts: With Prayers and Rituals for Family, School and Church
Jeanne Heiberg
Manufacturer: Paulist Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Decorative Arts
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Christmas
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Inspirational
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The Big Book of Catholic Customs and Traditions for Children's Faith Formation
ASIN: 0809135868 |
Book Description
Included in this all in one craft book are step-by-step directions for projects for pre-schoolers through teens, as well as reflections and readings, and ecumenical prayers and rituals for each age group.
For use with children 5 to teens.
Average customer rating:
- Old Fashion Family Fun
- Inspirational and Exciting
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The Ultimate Wreath Book: Hundreds of Beautiful Wreaths to Make from Natural Materials
Ellen Spector Platt
Manufacturer: Rodale Pr
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Decorative Arts
| Design & Decorative Arts
| Arts & Photography
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Crafts & Hobbies
| Home & Garden
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Seasonal
| Crafts & Hobbies
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Wreathmaking
| Crafts & Hobbies
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Wreaths for Every Season
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Complete Book of Garlands, Circles & Decorative Wreaths
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Great American Wreaths: The Best of Martha Stewart Living
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Wreaths: Creative Ideas for the Year Round
-
How to Do Wreaths If You Think You Can't (How to Arrange Florals If You Think You Can't) (How to Arrange Florals If You Think You Can't)
ASIN: 0875967205 |
Customer Reviews:
Old Fashion Family Fun .......2006-06-03
I've owned this book for several years. This book is a wonderful book. It has easy to follow instructions and even explains what items you will need to make the wreaths. This book may inspire you to even use your own ideas. I know it inspired me. It is a fun Christmas family activity craft book. Not many of those left around. It is a heavy book and the pages are full of pictures and illustrations. I would recommend this book to anybody who wants to start making your own wreaths. This book will educate and enlighten you.
Inspirational and Exciting.......1999-01-13
This book is sure to stop the winter doldrums quick in their tracks! The book is filled with inspirational and exciting renditions of Ms. Platt's designs on wreath making. It will surely appeal to those who desire to create masterpieces of similar design,as well as those who simply enjoy artistic designs in wreaths.
Average customer rating:
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Decorative Wreaths and Frames CD-ROM and Book (Dover Electronic Series)
Dover
Manufacturer: Dover Publications
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
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Calligraphic Ornaments CD-ROM and Book (Dover Electronic Clip Art Series)
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Decorative Corners CD-ROM and Book
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1500 Decorative Ornaments CD-ROM and Book (Dover Electronic Series)
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372 Frames and Borders CD-ROM and Book (Electronic Clip Art)
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660 Typographic Ornaments CD-ROM and Book (Dover Electronic Clip Art)
ASIN: 0486999785 |
Book Description
Scores of attractively rendered graphic elements for accenting brief messages and announcements — floral and foliated wreaths; graceful banners and garlands; oval, circular, square, and rectangular frames; and many other immediately usable royalty-free images. 381 black-and-white illustrations will lend a decorative touch to catalog copy, greetings cards, and other printed materials.
Average customer rating:
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Making Wreaths
Pamela Westland
Manufacturer: Book Sales
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Bargain Books
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Wreaths for Every Season
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Wreaths: Creative Ideas for the Year Round
ASIN: 1555217699 |
Customer Reviews:
Excellent for starters.......2000-09-23
This book is vivid with with full illistrations on each page. It has a getting started section that teaches you about using natural plant materials, color and style, and making the bases for the wreaths. The subsequent chapters give step by step instructions on how to make wreaths for various occasions, such as weddiings and baptisms, seasonal wreaths for spring, summer, fall, and winter, and holiday wreaths for Easter, Thanksgiving, Halloween, and Christmas. I have found this book to be delightul to use and a great resource for those who are making wreaths for the first time.
Average customer rating:
- Not for beginners
- A lovely book and a good buy
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The New Silk Flower Book: Making Stylish Arrangements, Wreaths & Decorations
Laura Dover Doran
Manufacturer: Sterling
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Decorative Arts
| Design & Decorative Arts
| Arts & Photography
| Subjects
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Decorating
| Crafts & Hobbies
| Home & Garden
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Flower Arranging
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General
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Silk Florals for the Holidays
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Creative Floral Arranging: How to Decorate with Fresh, Dried & Silk Flowers
ASIN: 1579900100 |
Customer Reviews:
Not for beginners.......2002-11-16
This book has nice pictures, but that's it. Of little to no use to a beginner looking for instructions on how to create silk floral arrangements.
A lovely book and a good buy.......2001-08-21
This book is full of lovely photographs and great projects. The instructions are brief, but the photos make up for that. An excellent book for anyone wanting to do some pretty arrangements for their home.
Average customer rating:
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Decorate a Christmas Wreath with 39 Stickers (Dover Little Activity Books)
Cathy Beylon
Manufacturer: Dover Publications
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Accessory
Fiction
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| Ages 4-8
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General
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Fiction
| Christmas
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All 4-for-3 Deals
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Gingerbread House Sticker Activity Book (Dover Little Activity Books)
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Little Advent Calendar Sticker Activity Book
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Little Thanksgiving Stickers (Dover Little Activity Books)
ASIN: 0486291804 |
Book Description
Choose 39 stickers — snowman, Santa, candy cane, angel, pine cone, snowflake, and more — and apply to circle of evergreens.
Average customer rating:
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Step-By-Step Dried Flowers: Over 30 Projects for Garlands, Swags, Wreaths and Festive
Pamela Westland
Manufacturer: Smithmark Publishers
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
General
| Home & Garden
| Bargain Books
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Flower Arranging
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ASIN: 0831727381 |
Average customer rating:
- DO NOT BUY THIS SAD EXCUSE FOR A WREATH BOOK !!!!!!!!!!
- helpful wreath book
- Beautiful Book
- 200 Wreaths by Very Talented Wreath Makers
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The Complete Book of Wreaths: 200 Delightful & Creative Designs
Chris Rankin
Manufacturer: Lark Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
| Antiques & Collectibles
| Home & Garden
| Subjects
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Decorating
| Crafts & Hobbies
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Flower Arranging
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General
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Wreathmaking
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Great American Wreaths: The Best of Martha Stewart Living
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Wreaths: Creative Ideas for the Year Round
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Wreaths for Every Season
ASIN: 1579902081 |
Book Description
“This book contains 200 awe-inspiring wreaths, each with a full-page color photograph and assembly instructions. Celebrate a baby’s birth with a wreath of wooly pampas grass and a toy lamb. You can even celebrate your own special interests with a wreath of feathers or sheet music. In addition to new ideas and inspiration, you’ll discover that wreath making is easy for beginners and experts alike.”—Crafts.
Customer Reviews:
DO NOT BUY THIS SAD EXCUSE FOR A WREATH BOOK !!!!!!!!!!.......2006-02-05
I would not buy this book if I were you. Here's why:
Reason # 1: It's very outdated. The copyright is 2001 but the copyrights for the materials and ideas comes from books that have copyrights from 1988-1995. This book is a compilation of other outdated books. There is not one idea from after 1995.
Reason #2: The wreaths are very unattactive (like one that is made out of potatoes, seriously, potatoes???? or the one made out of garlic cloves !!!) I don't think that I would make even 1 wreath out of the 200 ugly designs.
Reason # 3: There are no step-by-step directions. Each page has 1 picture of the finished wreath with a few sentences on what to do. There is no material list provided for the wreath you are trying to make. If I wanted to just eyeball it and make a wreath from something that I see, then I would go to a craft store, where they have hundreds of premade (and expensive) wreaths to look at. But I bought a book for ideas and instructions which are not provided in this book.
I hoped that I have helped you make an informed choice on whether or not to buy this book. I don't know what the other reviewers were thinking. I would keep looking if I were you.
helpful wreath book.......2003-12-27
I have this book and the ideas are quite helpful.
the steps are easy to follow and can be done with just about any material you can find. the designs are beautiful.
i would recomend this book to any floral designer.
Beautiful Book.......2002-08-27
I picked up this book to see if I would be able to make some wreaths for my home. Having never done it before, it is very encouraging to see the instructions photographed and clearly written in this book. The wreaths are absolutely gorgeous and detailed, and I loved seeing the different types. Being a beginner, I also appreciated the listings of all the flowers and supplies needed for each wreath, which are included in the descriptions. I'm buying it for my daughter, Emily, who has made some nice wreaths on her own. I recommend this book to anyone who is serious about making something beautiful for their home.
200 Wreaths by Very Talented Wreath Makers.......2001-08-01
What kind of wreath do you want to make?
Oh, you want to make a square wreath? Oh, you want to make three wreaths entwined together?
What! you want to make a vine wreath with each vine a different color?
No problem. How to make these wreaths and 197 more are in this book. The Complete Book of Wreaths is really a compendium of the wreaths of many different wreath makers. Most of these wreath makers have had other books published. It is great to find all of their talents pooled in this one work.
The first 40 pages of this book are devoted to wreath making basics. These are concise instructions on how choose or even make your own wreath base as well as basic points for choosing materials to complement your wreath, like seed pods and ribbons.
The next 180 pages are a wreath a page in full color with descriptions for each one that explain what is in the wreath and how to create one like it.
The last section is on Novel wreaths like all feathers and potatoes and moss???? And, you won't want to miss Terry Taylor's wreath of broken cups and cup handles.
This book only has wreaths, just wreaths and it is wonderful.
Average customer rating:
- Required Reading for Parents (er, do I have that authority?)
- A Bit Tedious at Times, Yet Highly Redeeming
- clearly written, well-documented
- A wake up call for parents
- The branding of children
|
Consuming Kids: The Hostile Takeover of Childhood
Susan Linn
Manufacturer: New Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Consumer Behavior
| Marketing & Sales
| Business & Investing
| Subjects
| Books
Research
| Marketing
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General
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Children
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Consumer Guides
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Born to Buy: The Commercialized Child and the New Consumer Culture
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Affluenza: The All-Consuming Epidemic (Bk Currents)
Accessories:
-
Health o Meter HDC100-01 "Grow with Me" Teddy Bear Scale for Babies and Toddlers
ASIN: 1565847830 |
Book Description
A shocking exposé of the $15 billion marketing maelstrom aimed at our children and how we can stop it.
With the intensity of the California gold rush, corporations are racing to stake their claim on the consumer group formerly known as children. What was once the purview of a handful of companies has escalated into a gargantuan enterprise estimated at over $15 billion annually. While parents busily try to set limits at home, marketing executives work day and night to undermine their efforts with irresistible messages.
In Consuming Kids, psychologist Susan Linn takes a comprehensive and unsparing look at the demographic advertisers call "the kid market," taking readers on a compelling and disconcerting journey through modern childhood as envisioned by commercial interests. Children are now the focus of a marketing maelstrom, targets for everything from minivans to M&M counting books. All aspects of children's livestheir health, education, creativity, and valuesare at risk of being compromised by their status in the marketplace.
Interweaving real-life stories of marketing to children, child development theory, the latest research, and what marketing experts themselves say about their work, Consuming Kids reveals the magnitude of this problem and shows what can be done about it.
Customer Reviews:
Required Reading for Parents (er, do I have that authority?).......2005-12-21
I see the reader review preceding this one states: "The only reason I do not give this book 5 stars is that the author focuses primarily on child-directed consumerism."
Perhaps said reader didn't notice the TITLE of Susan Linn's book? :(
Why CONSUMING KIDS isn't a national bestseller in perpetuity (and required reading for parents), I cannot explain, other than to suggest that Mattel and Disney have formed a conspiracy against it. Kudos to Susan Linn.
A Bit Tedious at Times, Yet Highly Redeeming.......2005-04-29
I learned about this book from the author when she was a guest on a local radio talk show. I like to describe my opinion as "not-so-humble-yet-worthless". In the case of this book that would be especially so, because I'm not married and don't have any children (a confession for which I am fully prepared to be lambasted behind, because I have the nerve to have an opinion on the topic).
Now that I've gotten that off my chest...I feel that this book was very good at shining a light on the ever increasing problem of the marketing and advertising blitz of consumer products that targets teens and working it's way all the way down to infants. I especially liked Linn's work as a "mole" during a marketing and advertising conference, how she exposes the way public schools have now become a hotbed for marketing executives, and I found myself empathizing with parents who are sports (mainly baseball & football) fanatics that may feel as if watching a sporting event on television is an indirect encouragement to drink, because of the flood of beer commercials that usually accompany televised sporting events.
I happened to be reading a portion of the book on a Saturday morning, and as I put the book down to turn on the television, the channel just happened to be on Fox. Linn speaks in specific detail about every single thing that I saw in that short TV break...the Fox/4Kids TV collaboration in the book, how that collaboration allows a particular ad agency to market to kids all morning long, every Saturday, how Companies like Lego have begun to offer playsets that are designed to create only one particular thing and as a result, stifle the creativity of young minds, and the way products devoid of nutritional value are marketed in this fashion, as well as the effects it may have on child obesity. So it's certainly not difficult to locate the evidence of which she speaks.
The book does drag at times and in just about every chapter, stops at or leaves room for many open-ended questions that as a result, make it at times begin to read a little too much like a buck-passing project put together by parents in search of a scapegoat for their bratty children. I could write an entire book myself on the questions that this one book raised for me.
But where I feel this book is superb, and I believe most readers will find the most useful, is in the final chapter...Ending The Marketing Maelstrom: You're Not Alone. Here, Linn constructs a detailed, yet highly attainable list of suggestions for solutions to the problem where everyone - young or old, parent or childless, marketing executive or schoolteacher, politician or clergyman, working with children or not - has a part to play. And while everything that Linn outlines is not attainable by everyone, I especially liked how she started the out with five segments of "WHAT PARENTS CAN DO"...in the home, in the community, in the schools, in the marketplace, and limiting television and why it's important...the things that are the most attainable by just about everyone. Because I truly believe it begins at home, and we can shine a spotlight on the problem until times get better, but at the end of the day, the reality of this world is that children are not a reflection of a cunning advertising agency or a slick TV commercial. Children are a reflection of the people raising them.
She also offers a list of other books as a suggestion to get people discussing the issue. I think I'm going to take her up on some of her suggestions. Having said that, I'll leave anyone humoring me by reading this review with a quote from one of America's more popular TV Dads, Bernie Mac, when speaking of his own less-than-well behaved TV children: "This is war, and I don't plan on losing."
clearly written, well-documented.......2005-04-07
It's hard to imagine someone picking this book up who already doesn't think kids are overly targeted by commercial interests, so the question of "does it make its point" doesn't seem to matter much (the answer is yes). If it won't convince you of its argument since you've already been convinced, what it will do at times is startle you with just how blatant or over-the-top that targeting is.
The book itself is well-documented in a variety of ways--a pleasing and effective mix of personal anecdote (a mother herself), academic scholarship/studies, psychiatry, and old-fashioned journalism involving interviews, internal company memos, and in some of the most interesting scenes, "under-cover" experience at some marketing conferences/workshops.
All the major and expected culprits are examined: tobacco, alcohol, sex, toys, television, etc.. Each one given roughly equal treatment of analysis, anger, and disdain. For the most part, the analysis is even-toned (though always with a sense of sad anger or urgency), though she occasionally stacks the deck against the book's villains a bit too obviously.
Linn closes with some proposed solutions. While she acknowledges the role of parents in such simple solutions as "hey, turn off the TV!", her main argument is that the balance of power has shifted too greatly over the past 20 years or so and the govt. needs to step in on a more aggressive parental/child-friendly fashion. Some will find her solutions overly-intrusive, others will cheer them on, and sadly, I think many will nod in agreement while thinking the genie's already out of the bottle.
There's really very little to complain about with regard to the book. As mentioned, it's a bit self-evident, so one doesn't expect any "wow" moments. And perhaps some more historical context could be helpful. A bit more balance from the other side would have been nice, even if it's hard to imagine much of a defense. But overall, it's a detailed, lucid argument made in pleasant fashion, even if the end result is frustration and sadness over just how far things have gone. Recommended.
A wake up call for parents.......2004-11-12
The central premise of this book is that parents are being told that it is their responsibility--not that of the government or private industry--to shield children from the harmful effects of marketing while at the same time, advertisers are using methods specifically intended to undermine parents' efforts. Young children are extremely vulnerable to advertising, and marketers exploit that vulnerability without any concern about the well-being of the children or the population at large. It is not realistic to expect parents to have control over these influences when they come from all directions and with such force.
What is most disturbing about this well-researched study is how unabashedly exploitative the advertising industry has become toward children. They are proud of "cradle to grave" marketing that can begin when children are toddlers or infants. The "nag factor" is considered a perfectly reasonable way to get children to convince their parents to buy them things. Harmful products such as obesity-inducing fast foods, nicotine, and alcohol are pushed the hardest at children, and statistics show that even the most well-intentioned and involved parents can fail teach their children to make wise choices.
The only reason I do not give this book 5 stars is that the author focuses primarily on child-directed consumerism. As a parent, I have experienced the secondary effects of marketing when I've purchased over-hyped products for my son that he hasn't even asked for. Such is the power of advertising that parents become trained to anticipate what they will be nagged for.
The suggestions offered to parents in this book range from actions we can take at home to political issues we can champion to help protect our children. There is no step-by-step guide to making our kids marketing-proof. The point of the book is that parents currently do not have the power to protect their children, and should not be viewed as solely responsible for their well-being. Things are getting worse and only pressure from consumers and from our political representatives can level the playing field.
The branding of children.......2004-09-15
Parents, grandparents, teachers, caretakers, and anyone who cares about children and the future of our nation, must read Susan Linn's, Consuming Kids, and take action. At it's core, Consuming Kids, examines the negative affects that marketing and advertising have on children. The disturbing fact is that marketing to children is a booming industry that is essentially profiting from programming children. The question Linn presents to the reader is: who is responsible for shaping our children? Is it McDonald's? Is it the Worldwide Wrestling Federation? Is it Pepsi? Is it Barbie? Linn argues and I agree with her, that today's generation of children are not basing their identity or values around those of their parents or friends, but are rather being shaped by brands and large corporations.
I myself am a student of media and marketing, having chosen a major in Communication Arts. In addition to this, I have spent my past six summers as a full-time nanny, and one day hope to be a mother myself. Why is this so important? All of these credentials provided me with the ability to read Linn's book from many different perspectives, however, in the end I received the same message no matter through what lens I was looking; marketing to children needs to stop, not only for children's benefit, but also for the benefit and well-being of society.
Linn brings a new perspective, as a mother and an Instructor in Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. Linn also serves as Associate Director of the Media Center at Judge Baker Children's Center in Boston. Her background allows her to speak from a mother's perspective, while also utilizing her experience in psychology when examining some of the tactics in campaigning and marketing to children. She successfully finds a balance between the concern of a mother and a deliverer of facts, making her a reliable and credible source. Through multiple personal examples, in addition to statistics and data, Linn reveals the harms of marketing to children.
Linn reflects on an era when children spent their time playing outside and creating fantastic imaginary worlds; however, as Linn points out, today a child cannot even read a popular novel, such as Harry Potter and bring his/her own imagination to it. Harry Potter has been constructed for them, no need to imagine what Hogwart's School looks like because they can see Harry Potter's entire world by watching the movie. Essentially Linn shows the reader that children are becoming programmed by the media and advertising. No longer do they stretch their minds and think for themselves, but rather they have become desensitized and need to be constantly entertained by way of television, video games, and computer games. When I nanny in the summers, the phrase "I'm bored" is uttered by every child in the family usually multiple times a day. My suggestions to play outside, color, or play a board game, are met by whines and responses of "I don't want to". Instead they prefer for me to take them to the video store to rent a movie or to simply act as couch potatoes, staring blankly at the television.
Linn's point is that corporations, commercial media, and advertisers are concerned with one thing and that is making a profit. The notion of instilling the correct values and lessons in children, in addition to reinforcing creativity and individuality, seems to have fallen to the waste side and has been replaced by images of sex and violence. Marketers strive to grab children's attention; sex and violence are only two examples of tactics that have proven to be successful. Not only is it problematic for a six year old to be playing with "lingerie Barbie", but also on a larger scale, where is the responsibility on the part of the marketers? Would they want their child playing with a scantly clothed doll? What lessons does that doll teach a child?
These questions of social and ethical responsibility are the heart and core of Linn's book. Linn recognizes that parents can only do so much and say "no" so many times before it begins to take a serious toll on their child/parent relationship. Therefore, she reassures parents that they are not the ones to blame, nor should they be blamed for problems surrounding children's exposure to negative and harmful images, but rather, people need to ban together and take action against the source of the problem which is the media themselves. Keeping consistent in tone and purpose, Linn offers a list of simple suggestions for parents to do their part in stopping the "marketing maelstrom". The future looks bleak if the media's messages to children revolve around sex, violence, and materialism. We must stop the advertising beast before it causes permanent damage and jeopardizes the future of society.
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