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Field Guide to Now
Christina Rosalie
€ 18.99
€ 16.26
FREE Delivery in Ireland
Description for Field Guide to Now
Hardback. Num Pages: 192 pages, colour illustrations. BIC Classification: VSP. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 193 x 145 x 23. Weight in Grams: 28.
Every self-help book tells us to "be present," but few succeed in showing us how. With this beautiful book, author and artist Christina Rosalie leads readers to discover how the small and seemingly mundane aspects of daily life can-through a shift in focus-become a springboard for the profound. Part adventure guide and part survival guide, A Field Guide To Now is filled with thought starters and creative exercises that will lead you to uncover your own extraordinary life amidst the ordinary moments of every day.
Every self-help book tells us to "be present," but few succeed in showing us how. With this beautiful book, author and artist Christina Rosalie leads readers to discover how the small and seemingly mundane aspects of daily life can-through a shift in focus-become a springboard for the profound. Part adventure guide and part survival guide, A Field Guide To Now is filled with thought starters and creative exercises that will lead you to uncover your own extraordinary life amidst the ordinary moments of every day.
Product Details
Format
Hardback
Publication date
2011
Publisher
Rowman & Littlefield United States
Number of pages
192
Condition
New
Number of Pages
192
Place of Publication
Guilford, United States
ISBN
9780762778560
SKU
V9780762778560
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-15
About Christina Rosalie
Christina Rosalie has been writing under the mentorship of Pam Houston since 2008. Her essays and short stories have won awards and been featured in print and online. Her blog, My Topography: The Shape Of Daily Life (http://mytopography.com) was the Best of Blogs "Best Creative Blog" winner in 2005, with a loyal and expanding audience of between 10,000 and 15,000 hits per day. A Field Guide To Now was successfully funded with more than $10,000 as a project on Kickstarter, and has a supportive following of backers who are awaiting their rewards in the form of chapter sneak peaks and postcards. Release of these will be timed to leverage the launch of the book. She is savvy to and active in the wide community of social media, where she has been interviewed about this book project by Susannah Conway, Beth Nichols, Liz Lamoreux, and Rachelle Mee-Chapman. The project has also been featured on Crescendoh, Wishstudio, Gypsy Girls Guide, and Boho Girl. She is developing a Field Guide To Now e-course and workshop (to be taught online and at Squam Arts Workshops in New Hampshire after the book's release), as well as an interactive Field Guide To Now website featuring a creative interview series and weekly reader contributions. She lives with her family in Vermont.
Reviews for Field Guide to Now
"An ode to the pleasures and sweet bondage of motherhood, a gift basket of drawings, musings, definitions and advice from the grassy hillside of a New England farmhouse. A labor of love, in love's coat of many colors; an offering to the God of the search for a valuable life."– Pam Houston, author of Contents May Have Shifted and Cowboys Are My Weakness "Christina Rosalie's thoughtful book, A Field Guide to Now, is a personal and conversational guide to faith and timing." – Sabrina Ward Harrison, author of Spilling Open: The Art of Becoming Yourself"In A Field Guide to Now Christina Rosalie brings life into perfectly crisp focus by distilling it, with letters and paint, down to its most basic and beautiful elements. While falling in love with her world, you'll remember what you love about your own life, and you'll finish the book inspired to make the most of every moment." – Katherine Malmo, author of Who in This Room: The Realities of Cancer, Fish, and Demolition. "No one talks about the moments in between," and yet Christina Rosalie does. Reminiscent of Annie Dillard, Rosalie shows us how the unexpected details of daily life – a weasel destroying the hen house, a praying mantis climbing the pepper mill – allow us to understand that "the present tense is at once much bigger and messier and also smaller and more precise" than we can imagine. Interrupted sleep, fledgling dreams, clambering children, and several cups of coffee later, we learn, as she has, that, "It's easy to look at what's achievable in a day and come up short. But it's just as easy to underestimate what you can accomplish in a year." Beautifully written and illustrated, A Field Guide to Now is just that, a guide to living in the present – one I plan to carry with me and return to often.– Laisha Rosnau, poet and author of Lousy Explorers, Notes on Leaving, and The Sudden Weight of Snow