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Where the World Was

Where the World Was in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $24.95
Get it at Barnes and Noble
Where the World Was

Where the World Was in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $24.95
Loading Inventory...

Size: Paperback

Get it at Barnes and Noble
"As a poet and writer, [Rosemary Sullivan] knows that life is lived not as theory but as practice, that . . . you can understand nothing about a place without listening to individual people and their stories." — Margaret Atwood
Incomparable writer, activist, and world traveller Rosemary Sullivan has at long last written a book about herself, about her life quest to "meet the world, to celebrate its richness, to face its darkness."
And what a fascinating book it is! Comprised of 21 essays spanning 5 decades and multiple continents,
Where the World Was
offers a vivid portrait of a writer who is instinctively drawn to other cultures and places.
Whether writing about a solo vacation inside the Iron Curtain, meeting the reclusive writer Elizabeth Smart in a dilapidated cottage in the English countryside, reflecting on how Chilean society responded to Pinochet's coup, or tracking down the people who knew Svetlana Alliluyeva for
Stalin's Daughter
, Sullivan delivers a master class in cultural studies, human rights advocacy, and empathy for the human condition.
"As a poet and writer, [Rosemary Sullivan] knows that life is lived not as theory but as practice, that . . . you can understand nothing about a place without listening to individual people and their stories." — Margaret Atwood
Incomparable writer, activist, and world traveller Rosemary Sullivan has at long last written a book about herself, about her life quest to "meet the world, to celebrate its richness, to face its darkness."
And what a fascinating book it is! Comprised of 21 essays spanning 5 decades and multiple continents,
Where the World Was
offers a vivid portrait of a writer who is instinctively drawn to other cultures and places.
Whether writing about a solo vacation inside the Iron Curtain, meeting the reclusive writer Elizabeth Smart in a dilapidated cottage in the English countryside, reflecting on how Chilean society responded to Pinochet's coup, or tracking down the people who knew Svetlana Alliluyeva for
Stalin's Daughter
, Sullivan delivers a master class in cultural studies, human rights advocacy, and empathy for the human condition.
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