The Love of Impermanent Things: A Threshold Ecology - Nature Writing & Environmental Philosophy Book for Eco-Conscious Readers | Perfect for Nature Lovers, Environmental Studies & Mindful Living
The Love of Impermanent Things: A Threshold Ecology - Nature Writing & Environmental Philosophy Book for Eco-Conscious Readers | Perfect for Nature Lovers, Environmental Studies & Mindful Living
The Love of Impermanent Things: A Threshold Ecology - Nature Writing & Environmental Philosophy Book for Eco-Conscious Readers | Perfect for Nature Lovers, Environmental Studies & Mindful Living

The Love of Impermanent Things: A Threshold Ecology - Nature Writing & Environmental Philosophy Book for Eco-Conscious Readers | Perfect for Nature Lovers, Environmental Studies & Mindful Living

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Description

At midlife, Mary Rose O’Reilley writes, we are called to an “archaeology of memory”—turning over a potsherd here, a fragment there—to assemble something whole out of the messiness of experience. Excavating her own life, she traces the middle-class Irish American background that shaped her, with its mix of antic humor, terror, and mysticism, and finds meaning in the seemingly smallest, most transient encounters.But O’Reilley’s purpose is less to recount these moments than it is to find the language for a different kind of story, in which the narrative of daily life opens to admit the holy and its corollary, the comic. Encouraging all of us to contemplate our own deep story, she calls hers a demo-life, in which the facts of personal history ground a narrative of consciousness and perception.Earthy and luminous, unconventional and profoundly illuminating, The Love of Impermanent Things offers a threshold ecology for readers of all ages.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
This is one of the best books I have read in a long time. Take Annie Dillard, Barbara Kingsolver and maybe the Dali Llama and put them together and you get Mary Rose O'Reilley. I loved how she ponders all the questions many of us ponder when we reach a certain age, like `Are we our vocation?' or "How should we be spending our time without guilt", "How we can feel lonely even though we seek solitude" "How come we can't be aimless any more?" All of this is mixed in with ordinary life events written in a very poetic and beautiful way with enough sarcasm to keep it from being boring. I don't know why more isn't said about this author, I think she is extremely talented and I'm glad I fel upon her writing - I hope we will see more of it.