Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
Striving to Survive - cover

We are sorry! The publisher (or author) gave us the instruction to take down this book from our catalog. But please don't worry, you still have more than 500,000 other books you can enjoy!

Striving to Survive

Ben Wood Johnson

Publisher: Tesko Publishing

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

This book includes several short essays, which debate the upshots of human survival. As an immigrant, I have been in the trenches. I left my home many years ago. During that time, I found myself in situations, which made me questioned the purpose of my existence. After more than two decades of wandering in futility on foreign lands, I am a bit cynical about my prospects. This book assesses the ontology of human survival by referring to real world situations. The text explores some of the hurdles a person might face in his quotidian. It examines the realities that typify a foreign social milieu.
Available since: 03/09/2020.

Other books that might interest you

  • The Curious Case of Benjamin Button - cover

    The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

    Francis Scott Fitzgerald

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    In 1860 Baltimore, Benjamin is born with the physical appearance of a 70-year-old man, already capable of speech. His father Roger invites neighborhood boys to play with him and orders him to play with children's toys, but Benjamin obeys only to please his father. At five, Benjamin is sent to kindergarten but is quickly withdrawn after he repeatedly falls asleep during child activities.
    Show book
  • The Westies - Inside New York's Irish Mob - cover

    The Westies - Inside New York's...

    T. J. English

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    It's men like Jimmy Coonan and Mickey Featherstone who gave Hell's Kitchen its name. In the mid-1970s, these two longtime friends take the reins of New York's Irish mob, using brute force to give it hitherto unthinkable power. Jimmy, a charismatic sociopath, is the leader. Mickey, whose memories of Vietnam torture him daily, is his enforcer. Together they make brutality their trademark, butchering bodies or hurling them out the window. Under their reign, Hell's Kitchen becomes a place where death literally rains from the sky. But when Mickey goes down for a murder he didn't commit, he suspects his friend has sold him out. He returns the favor, breaking the underworld's code of silence and testifying against his gang in open court. From one of the writers behind NYPD Blue and Homicide: Life on the Street comes an incredible true story of what it means to survive in the world of organized crime, where murder is commonplace.
    Show book
  • All the Ways Our Dead Still Speak - A Funeral Director on Life Death and the Hereafter - cover

    All the Ways Our Dead Still...

    Caleb Wilde

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    What if our dead remain with us? What if closure is not the goal? No matter what you believe about the afterlife, what if the hereafter intersects with the here and now?Caleb Wilde, author of the acclaimed memoir Confessions of a Funeral Director, was a skeptic. The baffling stories people told him—deathbed visions of long-dead parents, visits from the other side—must be hallucinations or wishful thinking, he thought. But the more stories he heard, and the more he learned about non-Western understandings of body and spirit, the less sure he was.All the Ways Our Dead Still Speak takes listeners on a lyrical and tender quest to encounter the hereafter. As Wilde picks up bodies, organizes funerals, and meets with grieving families in a small town in Pennsylvania, those who remain share with him—and us—what they experience in the thin places between life and death. Entwining these stories with his own as a sixth-generation funeral director, and with the findings of neuroscience and the solace of faith, Wilde creates a searching, reverent inquiry into all the ways our dead remain with us. In the process, he takes on prevailing dogmas about death: from a narrow Christian view of heaven and hell, to secular assumptions that death is the end, to pop-psychology maxims that say we all need "closure" after our loved ones die.
    Show book
  • Desert Solitaire - A Season in the Wilderness - cover

    Desert Solitaire - A Season in...

    Edward Abbey

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    When Desert Solitaire was first published in 1968, it became the focus of a nationwide cult. Rude and sensitive. Thought-provoking and mystical. Angry and loving. Both Abbey and this book are all of these and more. Here, the legendary author of The Monkey Wrench Gang, Abbey's Road, and many other critically acclaimed books vividly captures the essence of his life during three seasons as a park ranger in southeastern Utah. This is a rare view of a quest to experience nature in its purest form-the silence, the struggle, the overwhelming beauty. But this is also the gripping, anguished cry of a man of character who challenges the growing exploitation of the wilderness by oil and mining interests, as well as by the tourist industry.Abbey's observations and challenges remain as relevant now as the day he wrote them. Today, Desert Solitaire asks if any of our incalculable natural treasures can be saved before the bulldozers strike again.
    Show book
  • Charlie - A Home Child's Life in Canada - cover

    Charlie - A Home Child's Life in...

    Beryl Young

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The story of the 100,000 British children who came to Canada as child immigrants between 1870 and 1938 is not well known. Yet the descendants of these “Home Children” number over four million people in Canada today. The author is one of them. Charlie was her father.  Charlie is a compelling account of an English boy who is sent to an orphanage following the death of his father because his heartbroken mother is too poor to feed her children. Separated from his family, Charlie works his way out of poverty to eventually become a high-ranking member of the RCMP. Charlie’s story, like many others, is an inspiring part of our Canadian heritage, and will fascinate adults as well as children.
    Show book
  • Theodore Bayley Hardy VC DSO MC - A Reluctant Hero - cover

    Theodore Bayley Hardy VC DSO MC...

    David Raw

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    In 1916, at the age of fifty four, a slight, short sighted, unassuming country vicar and local school master became an Army Chaplain.  Theodore Bayley Hardy was destined to become the most decorated noncombatant in the First World War. He was to be awarded the Victoria Cross, the D.S.O., and the M.C. By day he performed the usual priestly and chaplaincy tasks but by night he would work the trenches dropping in with his inimitable "It's only me!" to bring comfort and moral and spiritual support in the nightmare of wars.Sadly, he was to die of wounds only a few days before the Armistice.
    Show book