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"This is a book of substance, well researched and honest. . . . [The authors] have really shown why [their] information is of use to readers in the 2020s." -Ina Orme, BS, MA, Teacher, Writer of Children's Literature "Each chapter is a revelation, from the first . . . to the last." -Terese Thonus, PhD, Applied Linguist and Professor, Director of the University Writing Program, Klein Family School of Communications Design, University of Baltimore "Insightful, sensitive, and a great read! Anyone interested in travel or cultural anthropology will find perceptive insights into Philippine life."…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"This is a book of substance, well researched and honest. . . . [The authors] have really shown why [their] information is of use to readers in the 2020s." -Ina Orme, BS, MA, Teacher, Writer of Children's Literature "Each chapter is a revelation, from the first . . . to the last." -Terese Thonus, PhD, Applied Linguist and Professor, Director of the University Writing Program, Klein Family School of Communications Design, University of Baltimore "Insightful, sensitive, and a great read! Anyone interested in travel or cultural anthropology will find perceptive insights into Philippine life." -Don H. Abbey, PhD, Retired Professor of Biology, Retired Field Director, Adventist Frontier Missions When the Claytons accepted the mission of teaching at a small college in the Philippines in the late 1970s, they had no idea how much their lives would change. Dale Clayton taught science; his wife, Karen, worked and took classes; and their young children, Kimberly and Jeff, attended a one-room, multigrade school. But this simple summary doesn't come close to encompassing the thrill and shock of becoming embedded in an entirely different culture. Martial law, academic politics, homesickness, and ruthlessly hot weather presented many challenges, but through it all, the Claytons inevitably learned that people are more alike than different-yet the differences make life more vibrant.
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Autorenporträt
Karen is a sociologist and social worker who teaches in universities, presents to social service agencies, libraries, and bookstores, and works in hospitals, hospice, and for the American Cancer Society. She is the author of Demystifying Hospice: Inside the Stories of Patients and Caregivers and has presented to the American Academy of Religion and Society of Biblical Literature about Easter celebrations in the Philippines.