Turn your clock back to a simpler time, when having fun didn't cost anything. Remember when you climbed a tree so high that you swayed in the breeze? Or the excitement you felt as a crab nibbled on your line? Or the terror you felt about learning to dive? Or the thrill of having a secret place? These stories of summer in coastal Georgia take you back to a young girl's childhood in the mid-1960s. Experience the pelting of rain on a tin roof, the family feeling of a barrier island picnic, the vicarious thrill of roof climbing, the fury of Hurricane Dora, and the satisfaction of new school shoes. Remembering . . .
Wendell Berry’s continued fascination with the power of memory continues in this treasured novel set in 1976. “[Berry’s] poems, novels and essays . . . are probably the most sustained contemporary articulation of America’s agrarian, ...
This is a timely reissue of this influential 1932 study of remembering.
RememberingA Phenomenological StudySecond EditionEdward S. CaseyA pioneering investigation of the multiple ways of remembering and the difference that memory makes in our daily lives.A Choice Outstanding Academic Book"An excellent book...
What makes us remember? Why do we forget? And what, exactly, is a memory? With playfulness and intelligence, Adventures in Memory answers these questions and more, offering an illuminating look at one of our most fascinating faculties.
Remembering-
How does memory change as we grow older, and what can we do about it? This is question is at the heart of Remembering Well.
First Published in 1996. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
But new research in psychology, neurobiology, medicine, and computer science tells a different story. Forgetting is not a failure of our minds. It’s not even a benign glitch.
131 David Janzen, Chronicles and the Politics of Davidic Restoration: A Quiet Revolution (LHBOTS 655; London: Bloomsbury T&T Clark, 2017), 1. 132 Janzen, Chronicles and the Politics of Davidic Restoration ...
They took trips together. And they talked about everything. But one day Crystal was not in the garden. She had died. In this gentle story, children learn, with Zelda, that true friendship is a gift that doesn’t die.