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  • - A Tutorial: Book 2: Intermediate
    af Marcus Holmes
    118,95 kr.

    Following Book 1: Beginning, How to Write Poetry: A Tutorial, Book 2: Intermediate raises the bar, teaching more poetic devices, expanding one's poetry vocabulary, introducing additional terminology, and challenging the writer to think on an increasingly sensitive and abstract level. Many new forms are presented, giving the poet a broad view of poetry from around the world and over the centuries.

  • - Revised Edition
    af Marcus Holmes
    118,95 kr.

    Marcus Holmes, as a poet with a unique voice, is an advocate for the Autism Community. He seeks to build bridges between autistic and non-autistic people to build greater understanding and respect.

  • af Marcus Holmes
    183,95 kr.

    he term Spectrum-Autist is how I describe one who is diagnosed with Autism-Spectrum Disorder.  Since I do not think of Autism as a "disorder, I prefer "Spectrum-Autist."  Being a Spectrum-Autist is to live in the in-between.  In-between a typical person and a profound Autist.  The in-between is a difficult place to be.  People can see me both as normal and as strange.  At first meeting me, there are not obvious signs and people often assume that I am like conventional humans.  The more time they spend in conversation with me, however, that view can rapidly deteriorates, but they do not quite know why.  They often recognize introversion, though I have been told by other introverts that I am "off the chart" introverted.  For a while, "painfully introverted" suited me for a label.  It is quite literally painful, to be among a group of people, expected to interact, and also to be alone, unable to be the person that I want to be.  At times I thought that I would slip into deep autism, never to emerge.  Meanwhile, I somehow got through school, college, graduate school, and a doctorate.  I learned other languages as part of my educational requirements.  Autistic people are not supposed to be good at language, right?  It was only later that I discovered, with the help of a brilliant and compassionate psychologist, Doctor James Pallas, that I have (what was then called) Asperger's Syndrome.  "What is that?", I asked.  He first put it in simple terms.  "You are a verbal-autistic."  A verbal autist.  Who knew?  He took me through the diagnostic criteria, and it explained so much of my life, my behavior, and the way that I express myself.

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