The Three Marriages
Reimagining Work, Self and Relationship Engelstalig
Paperback
Koop Tweedehands
Niet tweedehands beschikbaar.
Houd me op de hoogte!
Ontvang een e-mailbericht zodra dit boek weer tweedehands leverbaar is.
Koop NieuwWeb only
Niet nieuw beschikbaar.
Omschrijving
A radical, "crystalline" (Elle) approach to integrating our work, relationships, and inner selves from the bestselling author, poet, and speaker.
The author of Crossing the Unknown Sea and The Heart Aroused encourages readers to reimagine how they inhabit the worlds of love, work, and self-understanding. Whyte suggests that separating these "marriages" in order to balance them is to destroy the fabric of happiness itself. Drawing from his own struggles and the lives of some of the world's great writers and artists-from Dante to Jane Austen to Robert Louis Stevenson-Whyte explores the ways these core commitments are connected. Only by understanding the journey involved in each of the three marriages and the stages of their maturation, he says, can we understand how to bring them together in one fulfilled life.
The author of Crossing the Unknown Sea and The Heart Aroused encourages readers to reimagine how they inhabit the worlds of love, work, and self-understanding. Whyte suggests that separating these "marriages" in order to balance them is to destroy the fabric of happiness itself. Drawing from his own struggles and the lives of some of the world's great writers and artists-from Dante to Jane Austen to Robert Louis Stevenson-Whyte explores the ways these core commitments are connected. Only by understanding the journey involved in each of the three marriages and the stages of their maturation, he says, can we understand how to bring them together in one fulfilled life.
Specificaties
- Auteur:
-
Uitgever:
- ISBN:9781594484353
- Bindwijze:Paperback
- Aantal Pagina's:386
- Taal:Engelstalig
- Druk:1
- Publicatiedatum:Januari 2010
-
Rubriek:
Recensies
Recensies van onze lezers
Beoordeel dit boek als eerste!
Om een recensie te schrijven moet je zijn.