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When a famous Shakesperean actor starts to misspeak Hamlet, Sir Edward knows his career could be in jeopardy, but never wonder if destiny might be knocking. Not too far away, Cambridge scholar Dame Elizabeth experiences several lucid dreams on Shakespeare and Elizabethan England, which she is loath to share with her physicist husband Erik. Sensing meaning in her dreams as well as those places where Sir Edward misspeaks, Dame Elizabeth takes up the investigation after she herself is strangely upstaged at a book festival in Arizona. As the trail in Shakespeare's sonnets leads to southern France…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
When a famous Shakesperean actor starts to misspeak Hamlet, Sir Edward knows his career could be in jeopardy, but never wonder if destiny might be knocking. Not too far away, Cambridge scholar Dame Elizabeth experiences several lucid dreams on Shakespeare and Elizabethan England, which she is loath to share with her physicist husband Erik. Sensing meaning in her dreams as well as those places where Sir Edward misspeaks, Dame Elizabeth takes up the investigation after she herself is strangely upstaged at a book festival in Arizona. As the trail in Shakespeare's sonnets leads to southern France and the medieval troubadours, Elizabeth suggests her husband Erik follow their example and write her a love poem. He reluctantly does so, yet they are both enthralled by the power of courtly love that swept Europe in the Middle Ages. From London's Flat Street to the Tucson Book Festival, to the creativity of Cambridge University's own students, Shakespeare and the God Virus unfolds the playwright's mysterious experiences that he struggled to describe in his sonnets. Join British/Canadian author Christopher Eriksson for a Shakespearean drama on "the divinity that shapes our ends, rough-hew them how we will.'
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Autorenporträt
Christopher Eriksson M.A, PhD is a British citizen in practice as a counsellor and educator in Milton, Ontario, Canada, in a new program that helps prepare neuro-diverse adults for the workplace. He comes from a musical family and graduated with honours in Physics from Imperial College in London and earned a PhD researching the electrical properties of bone and soft tissues. He has published in "Nature", "Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences", "Biochemical Materials Research", "Journal of Individual Psychology", and "Clinical Orthopaedics". Dr. Eriksson is the author of a new scientific paper on "Adlerian Psychology and Music Therapy- The Harmony of Sound and Matter and Community Feeling," to be published in the Journal of Individual Psychology, volume 73, number 3, Fall 2017.