A Sideways Look at Time

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Jeremy P. Tarcher/Putnam, 2002 - Science - 403 pages
"A wonderful, delightfully humorous polemic against everything wrong with the way we deal with time today." (The Independent[London], Books of the Year)

"An irresistibly provocative and political analysis of time in our personal lives.... Her wittily enthusiastic thesis is that time has too long been used as a tool to power: as a manifesto it could cause a revolution." (The Times[London], Books of the Year)

"A Sideways Look at Timedoes for time what Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenancedid for philosophy... With this book Griffiths may just have beaten the clock. Passionately written and cogently argued, it's a book you should make time to read. (Time Out London)

Why does time seem so short? How does women's time differ from men's? Why does time seem to move slowly in the countryside and quickly in cities? In A Sideways Look at Time, Jay Griffiths takes readers on a mind-bending tour of time as we know it.

In this delightfully eye-opening book that poet Gary Snyder calls "an exercise indeed in Dharma, poetry, and philosophy," Griffiths reintroduces us to dimensions of time that are largely forgotten today. She presents an infectious argument for other, more extraordinary times, the diverse cycles of nature, of folktale or of carnival, when time is unlimited and on our side. This book could change the way we view time-forever.

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About the author (2002)

Jay Griffiths' writing has appeared in the London Review of Books, The Guardian, the Observer, The Ecologistmagazine, and Resurgencemagazine, of which she is an associate editor.

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