I Promise to Keep Quiet (After I'm Dead)* - Lea Hope Becker - Boeken - Authorhouse - 9781438919492 - 14 oktober 2008
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I Promise to Keep Quiet (After I'm Dead)*

Lea Hope Becker

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I Promise to Keep Quiet (After I'm Dead)*

Publisher Marketing: Maybe you saw the cover of this book on a shelf in a bookstore, and opened it, thinking it was the story of a former lady gangster with secrets to reveal -- or possibly the ruminations of a partially recovered escapee from a nut house. Well, tough luck, it's not. That book you are holding in your hand is just something I decided to write to get some old garbage off my mind. I'm not going to glorify it any more than that. I just happen to be an outspoken schnook raised by a pair of other outspoken schnooks, residents of an average neighborhood of nobodies, most of whose lives were pretty boring. So why buy this book? I'm no celebrity -- I'm not even a genius or a compulsive gambler -- although I am compulsive. There are two simple reasons why I wrote it: (1) Now that I'm a seventy-one year old lady, I can finally tell the truth about my undiagnosed insanity because all the other principal players in my personal drama are dead. I also thought it might be a good idea to put some of my childhood anecdotes in book form, rather than have them buried in some sort of time capsule. Knowing my history, nobody I know would ever dig it up anyway. (2) The second reason is that I need your money. I want you to purchase this relatively cheap book as a charitable contribution to my personal fund, and, trust me -- it's not even tax deductible. I'll let you in on a little secret -- I had a third reason. They say senior citizens who want to avoid memory loss should exercise their brains more. So by having to write in sentence form, in halfway decent English, I'm doing it. I am taking my brain out for a walk. I'm a survivor, I think. Yes, indeed, I've just checked my pulse. After living through a tumultuous childhood, crisis-filled puberty, interrupted schooling, multiple marriages, childbirth, divorce, career revisions (I've even practiced law for thirty years), health issues and a few other bumps in the road, it's time for me to be able to let go of pretense and face reality. (Yiikes!) Actually, I hate facing reality. It gives me the itches and takes me on that wild ride back into my past. All those memories are still vivid. When I was a four-year-old tomboy, I had a lack of well-behaved mentors to guide me. I was an only child until age eight of two working parents living in a storefront neighborhood where the only kids my age were rowdy little boys who were always dirty and played mean. I probably thought I was supposed to act like the little devils that they were. Fortunately, this stage of my young life ran its course and I settled down to a relatively calm existence as a mere rebel. I never got over that stage, but I'm harmless enough. I like the idea of starting a new project at age seventy-one, so I'm ready to reduce my craziness and compulsive behavior to a few chapters of light reading. I have tried hard to keep it light because my attitude is, if you want to get into something heavy, you're better off reading one of William Shakespeare's tragedies. I've had fun doing this project, so maybe you'll chuckle a little bit as you follow some of my antics. If you don't, well then, I've still got your money. I have come to the conclusion that it's a mistake to take the road of life too seriously, so I simply view it as a scenic bypass carved out of the murky human jungle. Contributor Bio:  Becker, Lea Hope When Lea Hope Becker graduated from DePaul University of Law in 1980, holding both a CPA certificate and law degree, she embarked on a two-fold strategy in order to acquire a fulfilling career. She would build a private practice concentrated in business and tax planning and write books dealing with her life experiences as a wife, mother, tax strategist, humorist and survivor of generational changes. Building and conducting her private practice soon consumed much of her time, but she never ceased writing articles, stories, humorous skits for events, poems and sketches for future books. Now she is the author of four published books, I Promise to Keep Quiet After I'm Dead (maybe), I Promise to Stay Married (This Time), Children I'm Home, and as of November, 2014, My Name's Not Robbie Any More. Lea Hope Becker's long career as a professional tax advisor and preparer has always been focused on representing clients requiring special attention. Her experience with small business start-ups, family estate issues and clients facing IRS audits has led to her philosophy of turning negatives into positives. She does this by injecting humor in her life and advising others, both young and old, to turn from despair to embarking on constructive projects. "Do something that makes you happy and give yourself a chance to smile," she says. "If life were too simple and success too easy to attain, we would all become bored out of our minds."

Media Boeken     Paperback Book   (Boek met zachte kaft en gelijmde rug)
Vrijgegeven 14 oktober 2008
ISBN13 9781438919492
Uitgevers Authorhouse
Pagina's 128
Afmetingen 152 × 229 × 8 mm   ·   199 g

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