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In the personal memoir How I Survived Three Years at a Two-Year Community College, one man shares his compelling three year journey into self-realization, adulthood, and the rigors of junior college as a series of highly improbable events propels him toward a greater destiny. Two years after high school graduation, James Swift was living with his parents, enjoying the health benefits of pineapple pizza while working a menial job that created fiscal freedom great enough to purchase a cavalcade of video games and compact discs. But something was lacking in Swift's existence-perhaps a predestined…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In the personal memoir How I Survived Three Years at a Two-Year Community College, one man shares his compelling three year journey into self-realization, adulthood, and the rigors of junior college as a series of highly improbable events propels him toward a greater destiny. Two years after high school graduation, James Swift was living with his parents, enjoying the health benefits of pineapple pizza while working a menial job that created fiscal freedom great enough to purchase a cavalcade of video games and compact discs. But something was lacking in Swift's existence-perhaps a predestined obligation-and he desperately pined for an exit from his lower-class purgatory. Through a series of events, he soon finds himself engrossed in the daily grind of junior college as a newly-enrolled communications major and, with a whimsical and honest style, Swift reveals how he eventually achieved philosophical, spiritual and socioeconomic independence all while bidding farewell to his fleeting youth. How I Survived Three Years at a Two-Year Community College is a coming-of-age tale of endurance and self-reflection that will enlighten anyone searching for answers in an uncertain world.
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Autorenporträt
James Swift is a writer in his mid-twenties currently residing in the metro Atlanta area. In his fledgling career, he has won numerous awards from the Southern Regional Press Institute and Georgia College Press Association and has written for several websites, including Retro Junk and the Wrestling Fan.