Fading of the Light: A Love Story

€ 5,99
  • EAN: 9788726541441
  • Categorie:
Omschrijving

"The Fading of the Light: A Love Story" is Albert A. Anderson's touching account of the loss of his wife to Alzheimer's disease. The poems contained in this collection were a way for him to deal with the effects this incurable illness had not only on his wife, but on him and their nearest and dearest. In publishing this incredibly personal journey, he hopes he can bring some solace to readers in a similar situation, who have to deal with a slow yet inevitable loss.

Albert A. Anderson, Ph.D., is Professor of Philosophy Emeritus at Babson College in Massachusetts, where he held an endowed chair as Murata Professor of Ethics from 1995 to 2003. He has also held tenured faculty appointments in philosophy at Clark University and Albion College and full-time positions at Bates College and Rhode Island School of Design. He was a founding member of the International Society for Universal Dialogue serving as its president from 1996-2001. He joined Edward Casey in translating from French "The Phenomenology of Aesthetic Experience" by Mikel Dufrenne (Northwestern University Press). He is president of Agora Publications, Inc., which specializes in translating, adapting, and performing classical philosophical texts.

Luisterrijk.nl
€ 5,99

Gerelateerde producten

A Heaven on Earth (Barbara Cartland's Pink Collect...

€ 4,99
The beautiful Aurora Hartnell has just left her Finishing School in Paris and returns home to Hadleigh Hall. It is Christmas Eve and she hears that an...

Raquel Abrantes

€ 2,49
A very nice talk with Raquel about her work as Operations Manager, her life as a mother and wife but also her ambitions in life. It was all about time...

The Tell-Tale Film, the Eight Strokes of the Clock...

€ 5,99
The Tell-Tale Film is a short story in the « The Eight Strokes of the Clock » collection of eight short stories by Maurice Leblanc. Their main charact...

Five Peas from a Pod

€ 1,99
There were five peas in a pod: they held their line and waited for the moment to leave. For them, everything was green: they were green and their worl...