10,99 €
inkl. MwSt.

Versandfertig in 1-2 Wochen
  • Broschiertes Buch

Despite our ethnic group, race, or background, we all share similar emotional struggles-sorrow, happiness, fears, anxieties, suffering, and joy. A Kite Caught in the Sky beautifully expresses our shared human condition through this collection of modern poetry by Dr. Zeenat Chowdhury-Jackson. During her medical career, she has been privileged to serve various ethnic groups, races, and backgrounds, and has witnessed firsthand the similarity between all people. Through her poetry, Dr. Chowdhury-Jackson connects adult readers of every ethnicity, race, and background to one another through our shared humanity.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Despite our ethnic group, race, or background, we all share similar emotional struggles-sorrow, happiness, fears, anxieties, suffering, and joy. A Kite Caught in the Sky beautifully expresses our shared human condition through this collection of modern poetry by Dr. Zeenat Chowdhury-Jackson. During her medical career, she has been privileged to serve various ethnic groups, races, and backgrounds, and has witnessed firsthand the similarity between all people. Through her poetry, Dr. Chowdhury-Jackson connects adult readers of every ethnicity, race, and background to one another through our shared humanity.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Autorenporträt
Zeenat Chowdhury-Jackson MD is a practicing physician in the US. Like most people, she was isolated and challenged emotionally, and physically during the 2020 pandemic, as well as clinically in her job as a doctor. To make things even worse, the family pet, a cockatiel that had been with them for 13 years, died during pandemic. To cope with it all, Zeenat began to write modern, contemporary poetry. She is a first line care giver doctor. Due to fear of Covid-19 and due to many restrictions on travel, she was not able to hug her child for nine months. There was a shelter for her, in writing, where she escaped every day to cope with her stress. These modern poems are the product of the Zeenat's imagination or are used in a fictitious manner.