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Jeffrey Ryan

    Jeffrey H. Ryan è un autore, avventuriero, fotografo e storico il cui lavoro esplora imprese all'aperto, sentieri escursionistici e le persone e i luoghi che si trovano fuori dai sentieri battuti. I suoi libri sono celebrati per la loro capacità di intrecciare un profondo apprezzamento per la storia in paesaggi contemporanei, immergendo i lettori nell'esperienza di camminare al suo fianco. La scrittura di Ryan evoca un senso di avventura e scoperta, approfondendo spesso la ricca storia e la bellezza naturale dell'America. Ispira i lettori a esplorare il mondo con un senso di meraviglia e rispetto per il passato e la natura selvaggia.

    Mike Jackson
    Philosophy and Working-through the Past
    Destroy All Monsters
    Mira Corpora
    Appalachian Odyssey
    • 2018
    • 2016

      Appalachian Odyssey

      • 320pagine
      • 12 ore di lettura

      Like many hikers who ve completed the Appalachian Trail, Jeffrey Ryan didn t do it in one long through-hike. Grabbing weekends here and days off there, it took Jeffrey twenty-eight years to finish the trail, and along the way he learned much about himself and made many new friends, including his best friend, who made the journey with him from start to finish. Including 75 color photos, this engaging book is part memoir, part natural history and lore, and part practical advice. Whether you ve hiked the AT, are planning to hike it, or only wish to dream of hiking it, this is the book to read next."

      Appalachian Odyssey
    • 2014

      Mira Corpora

      • 186pagine
      • 7 ore di lettura

      Mira Corpora is the debut novel from acclaimed playwright Jeff Jackson, an inspired, dreamlike adventure by a distinctive new talent.

      Mira Corpora
    • 2013

      Philosophy and Working-through the Past defends the relevance to philosophy of the implications of Freud's conception of object loss, especially his provocative discussions of mourning and melancholia. It engages with ongoing debates concerning the relevance of psychoanalysis to social theory, and suggests that emancipation from pathological culture be conceived as a mournful process of working-through the past.

      Philosophy and Working-through the Past
    • 2011