
A road map for overcoming loss, following your heart, and making dreams come true, charmingly hand-lettered and watercolored in Susan’s inimitable style, there are diary excerpts, recipes, and hundreds of photographs."–provided by .īlue on blue : an insider’s story of good cops catching bad cops


Funny, observant, touching, and addictive (you are not going to want this book to end), based on the diaries she has kept all her life, Susan Branch relates her inspirational tale of lost love and self discovery, her search for roots, purpose, and destiny with laugh-out-loud honesty. It was meant to be temporary, a three-month time-out from the daily grind of being broken up and miserable, but within days of her arrival, alone and not quite in her right mind, Susan "accidentally" bought a tiny one-bedroom cottage in the woods – which is how she discovered she was moving 3,000 miles away from everyone and everything she had known and loved. Summary: "In the winter of 1982, long before she became the watercolor artist and author we know today, Susan Branch, 34-years-old and heartbroken from the sudden and unexpected end of her marriage in California, "ran away from home" to the Island of Martha’s Vineyard hoping to gain perspective. The House of Twenty Thousand Books includes 43 photos. The House of Twenty Thousand Books is at once the story of a fascinating family and chronicle of the embattled twentieth century.

The books, documents, and manuscripts that covered every shelf at 5 Hillway were testaments to Chimen’s quest - from the Jewish orthodoxy of his boyhood, to the Communism of his youth, to the liberalism of his mature years.

A rare book dealer and self-educated polymath who would go on to teach at Oxford and consult for Sotheby’s, Chimen Abramsky drew great writers and thinkers like Isaiah Berlin and Eric Hobsbawm to his north London home his library grew from his abiding passion for books and his search for an enduring ideology. Summary: "The House of Twenty Thousand Books is journalist Sasha Abramsky’s elegy to the vanished intellectual world of his grandparents, Chimen and Miriam, and their vast library of socialist literature and Jewish history.
