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About the Book
“Blowing on Embers: Stories for Hard Times is a book that will
strengthen you and will warm your heart…both touching and
supportive…It is with honor that I highly recommend it to all…”
—Debra
Gaynor, ReviewYourBook.com
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"This book deepens our understanding of the creative power of
narrative for finding a way through problems and even catastrophes.
Psychotherapists will strengthen their practice by reading it, but
it is also a book to pass on to friends or clients going through
difficult periods -- or simply to read and hold in memory as a
resource for the unknown future." —Mary Catherine Bateson, author
of Composing a Life and Willing to Learn: Passages of Personal
Discovery.
“Bravo! A hard-to-put-down book about how to live with hard
times. As if we were sitting around a campfire, listening to others
tell their stories, we learn that indeed, happiness exists
side-by-side with pain.” —Pauline Boss, author of Loss, Trauma and Resilience, and Ambiguous Loss.
“Pulleyblank Coffey reveals how wisdom is dispersed throughout a
network of people. She shows through her stories how we can accrue the
world’s knowledge if there is a listener nearby who asks good
questions while blowing on the embers of our experience.” —James
Griffith, M.D. author with Griffith ME: The Body Speaks:
Therapeutic Dialogues for Mind/Body Problems and Engaging the
Sacred in Psychotherapy: How to Talk with People about their
Spiritual Lives.
“This is a wonderful and inspirational book. Affirming the
resilience of the human spirit, Pulleyblank Coffey is masterful in
describing and bringing forward the essence of the detailed stories
of remarkable women coming through some of life’s greatest
challenges. It is a terrific resource for all of us – women, men,
lay persons, and professionals.” —John S. Rolland, M.D. author of
Families, Illness, & Disability: An Integrative Treatment Model.
“The voices in Blowing on Embers are those of women who have
faced enormous adversities and have found ways of living with them.
Their voices are brought together so that we learn from them how to
live with loss, and grief, and hope for the future.” —Joan
Berzoff, co-editor of Living with Dying: Handbook for End-of-Life
Care Practitioners.
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