Self indulgence well-spent is a fine art. Why settle for a series of lattes, chocolate and red wine when, with a little forbearance, you can make a roll of Neccos last two days while driving along twuad* roads through gorgeous places, with the campground gods smiling on you? That’s what Sandy Compton was up to when he gathered the materials for this book.
Five years after COVID-19 ruined Compton’s retirement plan, the veteran writer and inveterate road-tripper collected on the long drive around the West he had promised himself. He was shooting for sixty days, and happily settled for sixty-one.
*’’Twuad” is an acronym for “twisty, windy, up-and-down,” the kind of road the author/photographer drove way too many of — but it beats the Interstate.
In Something About Miracles, Mary Magdalene Miller, M.D. tells the stories of three patients — or maybe they are clients — who have as much affect on her life as she does on theirs. She's a psychiatrist, by the way — a psychiatrist who believes in miracles.
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