
The author’s writing does sometimes depend too much on idiom, but that same playful inclination sometimes gives the book unexpected momentum. To that end, there are stories about the distress of missing a moment of possible mutual understanding in one chapter, Peterson expresses admiration for his dog but confusion about its erratic insecurities.

Overall, this book attempts to find ways to talk about personal feelings (in art and life) with someone one cares about, even if one can’t necessarily share the precise feeling. The volume’s title comes from an account of a moment when the author was struck by the beauty of a deer in his yard in it, he tries to explain why he stopped to watch it for nearly an hour. By recognizing other voices, the author shows appreciation for those he admires and who’ve supported him in a way that doesn’t often come across in solitary reflections. There are transcripts of informal conversations between photographers as they reminisce about how they started and an email exchange between the author and his best friend, Jan, about pursuing art while coping with chronic illness (the author has Parkinson’s disease). This lightheartedness persists as the book branches out into a variety of other subjects and formats. The Sy Kushner Jewish Music Ensemble, Vol.A photographer and museum curator’s collection of meditations and conversations on art, writing, and life in general.Īfter a friendly introduction, Peterson’s ( The Blossoming of the World, 2011, etc.) book immediately jumps into heavy topics, beginning with caring for a parent with Alzheimer’s disease, but it does so without losing much of its light tone. Western Themes: Famous Music from Classic Westerns Martin Kennedy / Kilbey Kennedy / Steve Kilbey Lonesome as the Land: The Civil War through the diaries of boy soldiersĢ776: A Levinson Brothers & Rob Kutner Presentation

Music for Zen Meditation (Shakuhachi Japanese Flute) Yume No Ukiyo Ni Saitemina: Momoclo Edition

New Brunswick + Beethoven: Beethoven + Nouveau Brunswick

The Baylor Project / Jean Baylor / Marcus Baylor Music Is a Universal Language so I Can Speak to Anybody on Earth Through My Music and the Reason I Strive to Be a Multi-Genre Artist Is so That I Can Reach All of the Earth to Let People Know That It Is Okay to Be Yourself and It's Okay to Be Different
