Coming to Terms: A Writing Lesson

by James P. Sullivan


Formats

Softcover
$13.95
Softcover
$13.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 8/11/2000

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5x8
Page Count : 392
ISBN : 9781587213618

About the Book

 

Coming to Terms: A Writing Lesson is about family, religion, poverty and survival in a thoroughly American setting, with eight of the formative years of the narrator --from fourteen to twenty-two -- spent studying to become a priest. Those who have read this unique and creative account of his successes and failures in coming to terms with life say it is perceptive and incisive: by turns, sad, joyous and satirically funny. The resolution of the intense internal and external conflicts, at each stage of the narrative, eventually amounts to a triumph of the human spirit in the face of adversity:

"So your work drew me like a magnet. I began to feel like a Kafka character who discovers a report done on him by an investigator who dogged his trail for years and invaded the secret recesses of his being with no sense of guilt, unaware even of the trespass. I kept reading, certain that I would sense what mark in the trail would follow, and, yet, just as certain that I had never really come this way before. Thank you for the opportunity to read what fascinated and frightened at the same time."

"Sharing your inner struggles with a reader to the degree you have must be both an agonizing and liberating experience for you. I feel it should be mandatory reading for all those contemplating a religious career and a touching revealing story of one man's life for average folks like myself."

"I loved the portion of work you shared. I found myself saying out loud, Oh, My, can he write. Jim, Oh, my, can you write. Thank you for letting me read it."

This tale of exhilarating triumphs and heartbreaking weaknesses and failure is about anyone who has ever tried to write. But in a very real sense, it is about everyone who has ever lived. Coming to terms with the mysterious mingling of choices and providence provides the chronological patterns of the narrator's life, but the application is everyone's.


About the Author

 

Since writing is the discipline with which by training and experience I am most familiar, I have called my story Coming to Terms: A Writing Lesson as appropriate to my purpose. I have lived this book: e.g. eight years in a seminary, two years in the army, 45 years in education as a teacher and administrator and formal training, including a Ph.D. in English education from New York University. Since my retirement as Superintendent of the North Babylon Schools on Long Island in New York, I have divided my time between teaching writing and literature to undergraduates and educational administration and supervision to graduate students. My wife, Dorothy and I now live in Naples, Florida.