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Loading... Home Comforts : The Art and Science of Keeping Houseby Cheryl Mendelson
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I enjoy this comprehensive reference on the joys of order and domestic bliss achieved through systematic home economics, discipline and attention to detail. Practical and inspiring. ( )"When you keep house, you use your head, your heart, and your hands together to create a home..." is from the Preface of Cheryl Mendelson's book Home Comforts: The Art & Science of Keeping House. This is one of the most thorough books I've seen on making a house into a home. A great resource for every home. This book tells you, perhaps, more about housekeeping than you wanted to know, but it's a useful reference and guide for the perplexed. This book contains all the information your mother or father or grandparents should have told you about cleaning but did not in this modern day and age. I remember as a new bride having to call my grandmother, a housekeeper, to ask how to clean a kitchen floor. I had no idea. From cleaning to cooking to repairs and safety, this book has it all. When my daughters start their own homes each will get a copy of this invaluable book. no reviews | add a review
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| Book description |
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Mendelson, a homemaker, lawyer, and mother, learned about housekeeping from an early age from her grandmothers, one Appalachian, the other Italian. The two grandmothers taught her that although different ways of keeping house can be appropriate, there are generally smarter, faster, and more creative ways of housekeeping that make it less of a chore and more of an art. In a practical, authoritative tone, Mendelson discusses the ins and outs of homemaking, such as washing dishes, recommended cleaning methods for various surfaces, housekeeping for those with pets or allergies, and emergency preparedness and safety procedures.
Mendelson's well-researched book includes meticulous sections on food (for example, which foods belong in the fridge versus the pantry, food storage times, picking the freshest fruits and vegetables, and keeping your kitchen and food sanitary) as well as laundry (caring for various fabrics, how to read--and read between the lines of--clothing care labels, and removing stains). Mendelson covers a lot of ground, and as she herself points out, readers shouldn't feel required to do everything mentioned in the book--simply pick the activities that seem appropriate for your particular home. This is a comprehensive reference book that should serve homemakers well and induce a greater appreciation for the effort and specialized knowledge that go into keeping house. --Kris Law
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:08 -0400)
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