Where There's a Will There's a Way: Or, All I Really Need to Know I Learned from ShakespeareWhen life becomes one big drama let history's greatest life coach help you rewrite it. Bard expert Laurie Maguire brings her knowledge and love of Shakespeare to bear on the great-and small-challenges that all readers face today. As she illustrates in this witty, accessible, and unique self-help book, all one really needs is Shakespeare when it comes to understanding life. Covering such universal subjects as identity, the battle of the sexes, family relationships, love, loss and death, Maguire shows how the dilemmas illustrated in Shakespeare's plays can help readers explore their own emotions and judgments. Together, Maguire and Shakespeare offer suggestions, comfort, empathy, and encouragement as they set out a timeless principle for living. To read Shakespeare is to understand what it means to be human. To read Where There's a Will There's a Way is to better understand how to deal with it. |
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Where there's a will there's a way: or, all I really need to know I learned from Shakespeare
Crítica de los usuarios - Not Available - Book VerdictAfter a year of working through personal, professional, financial, and health issues, Maguire (English, Magdalen Coll., Oxford) became a voracious reader of self-help books. She soon became convinced ... Leer comentario completo
Contenido
Thirteen MATURITY | 167 |
Fourteen Loss | 183 |
Epilogue Where Theres a Will | 197 |
Relevant Reading | 205 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Where There's A Will There's A Way: Or, All I Really Need to Know I Learned ... Laurie Maguire Vista previa limitada - 2007 |
Where There's a Will There's a Way, Or, All I Really Need to Know I Learned ... Laurie E. Maguire Sin vista previa disponible - 2006 |
Where There's a Will There's a Way: Or, All I Really Need to Know I Learned ... Laurie Maguire Sin vista previa disponible - 2007 |
Términos y frases comunes
abuse accept advice Angelo anger Antony asks attitude become begin behavior Bertram better chapter characters child Cleopatra comedy comes Cressida critic daughter death Elizabethan emotional experience expression fact fall father feel female forgive friendship give Hamlet happy Helen Henry human husband identity imagination jealousy Juliet kind king label later Lear lines live look lose loss lost lovers male Mariana marriage married means Measure meet metaphor mind never Night's Dream offers Othello ourselves pain parents person physical play present problem question reason relationship risk Romeo says scene sexual Shakespeare simply situation someone speak speech story suffer talk tell things thought tion Troilus true trying turn verbal wife woman women young