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Available July 2009
Category: Social and Cultural Commentary
ISBN: 978-0-9784982-1-4
Price: $22.95 USA/CDN paperback
Format: 226 pages 5½ x 8½
Features: Foreword by Senator Pamela Wallin, Introduction by the author's son, Patrick, photos, subject index. |
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Optimistic Realism through the Seasons of Life
Patricia M. Boyer
"Freedom of the press means in fact the freedom to be morally responsible to the public. Patricia Boyer fulfilled this condition with the grace, concern, intelligence and wit of a dedicated and perceptive writer. Her thoughts are timely, local and yet universal, a dialectic between the real and the ideal with a commitment to a progress which entails a constructive understanding of the past and an appreciation of humanitarian values."
— Sylvia DuVernet, literature professor and author,Toronto
Although Patricia M. Boyer won a scholarship to McMaster University with the highest mathematics marks in Ontario and graduated at age 19, literature and languages were her specialty. She first worked as a public librarian, next as a secondary school teacher, then as a newspaper editor. A community leader in arts and theatre, Patricia was devoted to human rights action in her local community and around the world, church work, drama, the education of children with disabilities, and music.
Each week she wrote a newspaper column inspired by episodes in the world around her, both local and global. She rewarded readers through articles infused with learning from literature, astute sensibility to human psychology, and balanced insights on the tragedies and comedies of life's passing parade.
Patricia Boyer summed up her approach to life as 'optimistic realism'.
This collection of the best of her celebrated columns, organized through the twelve months of the year or 'the march of days', includes reflections on seasonal celebrations, changing atmospheres of nature, and calendar milestones in the human cycle. A number of these concise yet poignant writings will move many readers with nostalgia as they evoke the happy events and tragic developments of the Sixties and Seventies. All of them, however, convey the wisdom of a woman whose message of optimistic realism endures like a timeless guide to living a satisfying life in the real world today.
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