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        <title>Jenna Bush growing up? - Bozick&#039;s bookshelf - tbozick&apos;s Blog - Victoria Advocate</title>
        <link>http://community.victoriaadvocate.com/home/Blog/tbozick/5715</link>
        <description>Jenna Bush&#039;s face is plastered on the front of this month&#039;s Texas Monthly and inside Jenna says her days of getting plastered are behind her.

Jenna&#039;s an inner-city schoolteacher who just wrote her first book while living in the shadow of her father in Washington D.C.

Her new book Ana&#039;s Story: A Journey of Hope has received criticism in the media that Jenna couldn&#039;t have written it without a ghostwriter or her father is using her to receive some positive association.

Skip Hollandsworth, the man who interviewed Jenna for the story, writes how he joked with the president that her book is better than his campaign biography.

Jenna&#039;s inspiration for her book was the story of a 17-year-old single mother with HIV who struggles with poverty and abuse. Jenna met her while working as an intern with the Latin American division of UNICEF in 2006.

The book includes advice about what to do in situations of abuse or what to do if you contract HIV.</description>
        <itunes:summary>Jenna Bush&#039;s face is plastered on the front of this month&#039;s Texas Monthly and inside Jenna says her days of getting plastered are behind her.

Jenna&#039;s an inner-city schoolteacher who just wrote her first book while living in the shadow of her father in Washington D.C.

Her new book Ana&#039;s Story: A Journey of Hope has received criticism in the media that Jenna couldn&#039;t have written it without a ghostwriter or her father is using her to receive some positive association.

Skip Hollandsworth, the man who interviewed Jenna for the story, writes how he joked with the president that her book is better than his campaign biography.

Jenna&#039;s inspiration for her book was the story of a 17-year-old single mother with HIV who struggles with poverty and abuse. Jenna met her while working as an intern with the Latin American division of UNICEF in 2006.

The book includes advice about what to do in situations of abuse or what to do if you contract HIV.</itunes:summary>
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                    <item>
                <title>Nov 13,  2007 at 04:11 PM : I&#039;m not sure...</title>
                <description>I&#039;m not sure where you were trying to go with this post.  Her book &amp; the work she has done has nothing to do with her father.  I read the book &amp; enjoyed it.  More surprising was my daughter who dislikes reading loved the book.  We went to the book signing &amp; Jenna was very nice &amp; appreciative.  If you like to think you are a book critic read your post again &amp; you will realize you were just being critical.  You have lost all credibility as far as I am concerned.</description>
                <link>http://community.victoriaadvocate.com/home/Blog/tbozick/5715/#c_24288</link>
                <guid>http://community.victoriaadvocate.com/home/Blog/tbozick/5715/#c_24288</guid>
                <itunes:summary>I&#039;m not sure where you were trying to go with this post.  Her book &amp; the work she has done has nothing to do with her father.  I read the book &amp; enjoyed it.  More surprising was my daughter who dislikes reading loved the book.  We went to the book signing &amp; Jenna was very nice &amp; appreciative.  If you like to think you are a book critic read your post again &amp; you will realize you were just being critical.  You have lost all credibility as far as I am concerned.</itunes:summary>     
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