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Book Details

Splinters: The Pain, The Passion, The Point  

By Barbara Howell  

Softcover, 160 pgs, 

Color Photos Throughout

$19.95

E-book Available!

$9.95

Meet Barbara

Barbara Howell

Memberships & Affiliations

Tulsa Night Writers

OWFI

FCW Member

Rhema Writers Bloc

 

View Barbara Howell's profile on FiledBy

Courage and Truimph
The Reviews Are In! PDF Print E-mail

Cabinet Maker MagazineCabinet Maker +FDM Magazine headquartered in the North East, United States, released a review of Splinters: The Pain, The Passion, The Point in their September 2009 issue. The magazine is targeted towards cabinet makers and others in the woodworking industry.

Naturally, reviewing Splinters was a perfect fit for the publication. The entire magazine is available here. Or you can read the review written by Editor-in-Chief, William Sampson, below:

Woman relates tale of challenges and determination successfully taking over her husband's woodworking business.

All of us, especially now, encounter daily obstacles in our business and personal lives. But I'm guessing few of us have run up against the challenges faced by Barbara Howell. She overcame repeated financial, physical and personal setbacks to successfully develop a small woodoworking manufacturing business building mostly custom display boxes, even though at the start she knew nothing about woodworking or business.

Now, let me warn you right away, this is not a business education book. You're not going to garner any new manufaturing efficiency ideas. In fact, most of us connected with the established woodworking industry will shake our heads at some of the ways Howell approaches her woodworking problems. What she doesn't know about woodworking would fill several books this size. But that's not the point.

Splinters ReviewWhat the book is about is the perseverance of one woman bucking the odds. The book is chock full of dysfunctional family members and tales of bad luck, bad habits and downright incompetence. Howell faces the divorces of her children, her husband's battles  with cancer and mental illness and even her brother-in-law's murder conviction.

But you just keep coming back to how this woman refuses to quit. Faith, stubborness, whatever, she just keeps going. Today, her business, Southern Ladies Showcases, distributes products internationally and counts a number of the rich and famous among it's clientele.

Some of the stories are poignant and some are pretty funny. There are lots of road stories because her first primary marketing venue was craft fairs and flea markets across the South and Midwest. I don't think I'd want to be on any highway near this woman when she's driving and hauling her 58-foot trailer, rivets popping, and panels held together with duct tape. Then there's an incident where she unwittingly participates in an FBI sting operation.

This book is like watching one of those old cartoon car chases on a winding mountain road. You know the ones—where the vehicle keeps crashing against the mountain and into each other and swerving way over the cliff edge. When you're done you'll breathe a big sigh of relief that you don't have half the troubles this woman has had to deal with. Recession? What recession?

 
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