Bee Time: Lessons from the Hive by Winston. Regarding the connection between bees and dialogue between people,"Initiating a dialogue requires the same attention as entering an apiary. Both stimulate a state of deep listening, engage all the senses: hearing without judging... Focus sharpens on how participants are interacting... Solitary becomes communal."
Wow, cool, good for you!! One of the gaps in my reading life — painful to admit: I've never read Saul Bellow. I keep meaning to get on that. Any recommendations on the best place to start?
Walking to Gatlinburg by Howard Frank Mosher. I'm hoping to finish it tonight and then not sure what my next book will be yet. So many choices!
This title is new to me. Civil War fiction — I could learn a lot from reading that.
I love that “so many choices” feeling. 📚
Bee Time: Lessons from the Hive by Winston. Regarding the connection between bees and dialogue between people,"Initiating a dialogue requires the same attention as entering an apiary. Both stimulate a state of deep listening, engage all the senses: hearing without judging... Focus sharpens on how participants are interacting... Solitary becomes communal."
Wow that sounds fantastic
My current read is "Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World that can't Stop Talking". Interesting.
After years of it sitting on my shelf, I'm finally getting around to We Were the Mulvaneys by Joyce Carol Oates.
Wow, cool, good for you!! One of the gaps in my reading life — painful to admit: I've never read Saul Bellow. I keep meaning to get on that. Any recommendations on the best place to start?