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Carol Piccone wasn't like the other philosophy students. She asked hard questions and seemed far ahead of the class. She was smart and beautiful and knew about Kant and Kierkegaard-she'd even read Hegel. To the young philosophy professor Mack Davies, Carol offered a chance to move beyond words and abstractions into a world of risk and action. Before long they were having sex behind his locked office door while other students waited outside. Mack's specialty was analyzing complicated moral issues, but when Carol revealed her plan to murder her husband, his choices became surprisingly and…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Carol Piccone wasn't like the other philosophy students. She asked hard questions and seemed far ahead of the class. She was smart and beautiful and knew about Kant and Kierkegaard-she'd even read Hegel. To the young philosophy professor Mack Davies, Carol offered a chance to move beyond words and abstractions into a world of risk and action. Before long they were having sex behind his locked office door while other students waited outside. Mack's specialty was analyzing complicated moral issues, but when Carol revealed her plan to murder her husband, his choices became surprisingly and frighteningly clear. THE WOMAN WHO HATED PHILOSOPHERS takes the reader on a wild ride into the minds of two of the most troubling and unforgettable characters in today's fiction.
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Autorenporträt
John Mullen is a writer, philosopher and sailor living in the fishing port of Gloucester, Massachusetts. He has authored three books of nonfiction, including the widely-read Kierkegaard's Philosophy: Self-Deception and Cowardice in the Present Age (1995). His stories and flash fiction have appeared in various literary journals, for example, "The Coprological Visions of Judy Dallas: A Retrospective" (Cynic Magazine), "Gone Dad" in Boston Literary Magazine, "Loving Marilyn Maples" in City Lines Magazine, "The War on Terror" in Diddledog: A Miscellany of Flash Fiction, "The Breast Center" in Full of Crow Magazine and "Disarticulated Parts" (in E. Knapp, ed., Glimpses of Insanity, 2012). His many book reviews can be found at Metapsychology Online Reviews.