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From this unexpected "jolting" of poetry publication cardiac arrest, thus emerged this new volume of stars light into the being. It has been written and published against this poetic backdrop footprint that I left behind inadvertently during the course of my Socio-sociological journey. This effort was also augmented by the additional reasoning advantage that the previous posthumous publications were clearly lacking. No one else than the author himself knows better as to which poem to be eliminated and crossed, which one to be trimmed and edited in major way, and which ones to be embraced…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
From this unexpected "jolting" of poetry publication cardiac arrest, thus emerged this new volume of stars light into the being. It has been written and published against this poetic backdrop footprint that I left behind inadvertently during the course of my Socio-sociological journey. This effort was also augmented by the additional reasoning advantage that the previous posthumous publications were clearly lacking. No one else than the author himself knows better as to which poem to be eliminated and crossed, which one to be trimmed and edited in major way, and which ones to be embraced straight up as the major literary criticism deserving the spot light. It goes without saying that this volume is the lion share of the piled up work that I have drilled through and "ran for it" for this collection and it's "happily" entitled: Lights of the Dead. This is divided in 2 different volumes so be sure to check Volume 8.
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Autorenporträt
Abol Danesh, with a PhD in sociology from the University of California, picked up professorial position in sociology full-time, first in 1985 at Colby College in Maine for four years and then at the University of Rhode Island. He earned his professorship tenure in 1992. Danesh published three volumes of his sociological research program during 1987-1999. Later on, Danesh picked up poetry as an adjunct activity to his professorial career and published the first volume of Stars Light in 2004. His second volume of Stars Light appeared in 2006, under the rubric of Flame of Life. In 2008, Danesh published the third volume of Stars, entitled The Evening Dew. In the same year, his fourth volume emerged, with the title of Love Must Be Loved. This fifth volume of Stars, with the title of Leaf, is an inspirational and healing work on the theme of resurrection and rebirth. Danesh has been diagnosed with bipolar disorder and manic depression and has been struggling with this consuming disease since 2000. Gardening, long-distance walking, poetry writing, house cleaning, short-distance running, and bird-watching are some of the things Danesh does to alleviate the gripping pain of this illness over his soul and his spirit. In the United States, Danesh has lived in Texas, Maine, Rhode Island, and California.