19,99 €
inkl. MwSt.

Versandfertig in 1-2 Wochen
payback
10 °P sammeln
  • Broschiertes Buch

David Connor's gutsy collection of poetic renderings is a compendium of the 20th century American life as seen through the unflinching eye of a dedicated physician and investigator into the mysteries of body and soul. In poems that are quirky, specific, and complex - layered with horrors, humor, and redemption - we find images so clear they become mirrors, and we are able to glimpse, for a moment, our own invaluable inexplicable lives. ~~~~ ABOUT THE AUTHOR ~~ David Connor is a retired physician living in San Rafael, California, with his wife and two dogs. His interest in poetry began early in…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
David Connor's gutsy collection of poetic renderings is a compendium of the 20th century American life as seen through the unflinching eye of a dedicated physician and investigator into the mysteries of body and soul. In poems that are quirky, specific, and complex - layered with horrors, humor, and redemption - we find images so clear they become mirrors, and we are able to glimpse, for a moment, our own invaluable inexplicable lives. ~~~~ ABOUT THE AUTHOR ~~ David Connor is a retired physician living in San Rafael, California, with his wife and two dogs. His interest in poetry began early in life, influenced by his mother and a great aunt, a poet of the 1930's. He did not have a literary education; instead he graduated from Harvard University with a B.A. in Economics and from the University of Minnesota with a B.S. and an M.D. He practiced Nephrology in the San Francisco Bay Area for 30 years and began attending poetry workshops with Diane Frank, Dale Biron, and Prartho Sereno. He still practices medicine in Northern California, as long as the doctors he covers for are near fly fishing rivers.
Autorenporträt
David Connor lives in a small town in New York with his cat Molly, and the spirits of Max, Mrs. Fat Pants, and those fur-babies that have left Earth before them. His grade school English teacher, after reading one of David's stories, suggested David write for As the World Turns someday. Books, magazine articles (including the soap mags), the stage, and even radio, he has done just about everything except write for daytime TV. He is still hopeful-as long as there are still some left.