Download Ebook , by Stacy Gleiss

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, by Stacy Gleiss

, by Stacy Gleiss


, by Stacy Gleiss


Download Ebook , by Stacy Gleiss

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, by Stacy Gleiss

Product details

File Size: 1277 KB

Print Length: 228 pages

Publication Date: November 7, 2016

Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC

Language: English

ASIN: B01N3PFXHT

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#819,796 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

The Six-foot Bonsai is a remarkable story, well told by the only person who can tell it. Author Stacy Gleiss has opened her life and her heart to tell the hardest of truths.As a child in the 50’s and 60’s, like many other children, I would fantasize about living in a foreign land. Could I really fly on a magic Arabian carpet or live in a tree like Mowgli or better still Jane?When I grew older the mystery of these lands rather lessened as I was exposed to magazines like Holiday and National Geographic. Documentaries on television and travelogues held at the local library or our church, by those few lucky individuals who traveled to faraway places on missionary trips or for work in the ever more global economy, brought tales of these lands home.One of the countries which remain mysterious and romanticized is Japan. With its visions of cherry blossoms, Shirley MacLaine, as a poised yet coquettish kimono-clad hostess, in the 1961 movie My Geisha and the horticultural wonder of the miniature Bonsai tree, pruned to perfection¬; Japan still intrigues me. And what of the longtime and growing fascination with one of its most successful exports: anime?Popular broadcaster Paul Harvey made famous the phrase “the rest of the story” and for those like me, who subscribe to the credo that truth is indeed stranger than fiction, this book is for you. The rest of the story, revealed in the pages of The Six-Foot Bonsais, is the story of one lonely young girl from rural Michigan, whose family participated in a Japanese exchange student program, and whose enthrallment with Japan led her to an intimate experience of the underbelly of this ancient culture.Mesmerizing in a way only the truth can be, Stacy Gleiss, through her autobiography leads the reader to understand a darker side of Japan: from her dreamlike life on the island of Sado as the bride of a Japanese student, through her struggles to deprogram herself from all her dreams of becoming Japanese, back to the stunning reality of the nightmare from which the author still must untangle herself and help her children to do the same.Though the final chapters of this book are still, and probably in some ways will always be, lived out by its author, Stacy Gleiss shares, with uncommon openness, her life and her continued concerns for the effect Japan’s ancient practices, now disguised as innocent fantasy, have both in Japan and throughout the world, in the form of some anime.Through it all. she finds in her own backyard a faith that surprises and sustains her.This is an extremely personal story told by one who left her life only to find it again. Well-written in her own matter-of-fact style, Stacy’s experience has a larger message for her readers to contemplate. That of the long-lasting effect culture, and sub-cultures; whether those encountered in other lands, our own country or within families; have on us all.

The author embarked on her journey as a teenager who traveled to Japan in the late 1970's and immediately fell in love with its inimitable culture as well as some of the people living in it. Her unfortunate encounter with a smooth-taking pedophile led to years of emotional and physical abuse at the hands of a boorish bully who acted like may spoiled elder sons I have heard about. The difference here, I'd point out, was the extensive evidence he barely hid of his pedophilia tendencies and in her conflagration of the Japanese culture and her ex-husband's sickness, culminating in years of abuse she was unable to protect her daughter from, for which she suffered immeasurable guilt. At the end of the story, her spiritual discovery seemed to set her free. I'm glad for her, but as an atheist it's a bit difficult for me to digest. I share her grown children's skepticism about their recalcitrant father and his ability to "Right" a lifetime of wrongs. I'd caution against thinking that a love for Japanese or any other culture is an addiction, but in her case it seemed to have manifested as an escape valve in much the way that drugs or alcohol might. When she writes on Japan's under-discussed "Lolikon" issue, in which young girls are fetishized by men of all ages, she presents a cogent argument begging for more attention from academia. I've lived nearly half my life in rural Japan and much of what she describes is familiar, from the music to the food, from the fashion to the fetishes. I hope she can unite with her daughter and share this story in Japanese, as I believe the message is vitally important. Please let the daughters of Japan know that their bodies are only their own!

Even at age 20 I share a strong relationship with the key problems of Japanese culture and what it can bring out in sexual ways, which is expressed in it's fullest in this book.Stacy Gleiss is a strong person all throughout her life, even through the experiences that would make most people want to commit suicide, and she writes about each event in this book in each event's detail.This is an incredibly compelling read, and teaches a lesson about the dangers of cultural addiction. This is the only book I've found that expresses the problem with sexual exploitation and abuse of under aged girls in Japan, because it is still a surprisingly huge problem. Now that Japanese media is coming more and more into the United States, I think it's important just to look at everything with a cautionary eye.If you ever plan on living to Japan, this is a MUST READ before you do!

SPOILERS BELOW:It’s hard to review a memoire, as the story was someone’s actual life, but here goes.Gleiss was a lonely, bullied, “disfigured” child whose desperate need for acceptance and attention led her down a rabbit hole of bad decisions that destroyed more than just her own life.Reading this book was like watching a train wreck begin in slow motion and then play in double time. I expected her first encounter with her evil ex-husband to be that of a moon-eyed teenager swooning over and exotic older man, but was disturbed to see she saw the warning signs IMMEDIATELY and still pursued this man who would one day rape her daughter.From bad decision to bad decision, Gleiss dug herself in so deep that her spiral out of control was easy to see coming and she must have been out of her mind to continue as she did for so long.Though it seems to end in the author finding peace, as someone who lost faith early in life, I find it hard to believe her “finding Christ” is anything more than another obsession to replace Japan.As for Gleiss’s ex-husband, as a casual fan of Japan and anime, this book is a good warning of how detrimental the lolikon culture can be to its consumers and those around them.

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