Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. No Jacket. Former library book; May have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: ME - Fordham University Press, 2021
ISBN 10: 0823297780 ISBN 13: 9780823297788
Anbieter: PBShop.store UK, Fairford, GLOS, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 29,68
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In den WarenkorbHRD. Zustand: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.
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In den WarenkorbHardcover. Zustand: Brand New. 144 pages. 9.00x6.00x0.87 inches. In Stock.
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EUR 38,52
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In den WarenkorbZustand: New.
Zustand: New. 2021. 1st Edition. Hardcover. . . . . . Books ship from the US and Ireland.
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In den WarenkorbGebunden. Zustand: New. Über den AutorA tenured Professor at Duke University, Marianna De Marco Torgovnick teaches in Durham, North Carolina, during most Spring terms a very popular course called America Dreams American Movies, also the title of h.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Fordham University Press Sep 2021, 2021
ISBN 10: 0823297780 ISBN 13: 9780823297788
Anbieter: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Deutschland
Buch. Zustand: Neu. Neuware - From the award-winning author of Crossing Ocean Parkway, a personal memoir about adjusting to loss through books, meditation, and the process of memory itselfMarianna De Marco Torgovnick experienced the rupture of two of her life¿s most intimate relations when her mother and brother died in close proximity. Mourning rocked her life, but it also led to the solace and insight offered by classic books and the practice of meditation. Her resulting journey into the past imagines a viable future and raises questions acute for Italian Americans but pertinent to everyone, about the nature of memory and the meanings of home at a time, like ours, marked by cultural disruption and wartime. Crossing Back: Books, Family, and Memory without Pain presents a personal perspective on death, mourning, loss, and renewal.A sequel to her award-winning and much-anthologized Crossing Ocean Parkway, Crossing Back is about close familial ties and personal loss, written after the death of her remaining birth family, who had always been there, and now were not. After their loss, she entered a spiritual and psychological state of ¿transcendental homelessness¿: the feeling of being truly at home nowhere, of being spiritually adrift. In a grand act of symbolic reenactment, she found herself moving apartments repeatedly, not realizing she did so subconsciously to keep busy, to stave off grief. By reading and studying great books, she opened up to mourning, a process she constitutionally resisted as somehow shameful. Over time, she discovered that a third death colored and prolonged her feelings of grief: her first child¿s death in infancy, which, in the course of a happier lifetime, had never been adequately acknowledged. Her new losses led her finally to take stock of her son¿s death too. Reading and meditating, followed by writing, became daily her healing rituals.A warm and intimate user¿s guide to books, family, and memory in the mourning process, the end-point being memory without pain, Crossing Back is a wide-ranging memoir about growing older and learning to ride the waves of change. Lively and conversational, Torgovnick is masterful at tracking the moment-to moment, day-to-day challenges of sudden or protracted grief and the ways in which the mind and the body seem to search for¿and sometimes find¿solutions.