About the Author:
Sandra Blakeslee is a science writer based in Santa Fe, New Mexico. She has spent nearly all of her career writing for the New York Times, both as a staff writer and on contract. She also writes books. For the past fifteen years, she has specialized in the brain sciences. She also particularly likes stories about the environment, earth sciences and all things biological. As the recipient of a Templeton Journalism Fellowship, she spent several weeks in the summer of 2007 at Cambridge University in England, discussing science and religion. For pleasure, she is a cyclist, hiker, skiier and (if a knee injury heals up) runner. Recent adventures have taken her to Nepal (hiking to Annapurna Base Camp in a snowstorm), to Burma (moutain bike ride across the north), down the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon (the paddle boat is most fun) and, in August 2008, trekking in the unbelievably steep Japan Alps. Sandra grew up in Port Washington, New York, attended Northwestern University for two years and transferred to the University of California at Berkeley where she graduated in 1965 with a major in poltical science. She went into the Peace Corps in 1965, to Sarawak, Borneo, where she lived upriver and taught elementary school. Upon returning in 1967, she was hired at the United Nations bureau of the New York Times as a clerk.. and the rest is history. She has two adult children, Matt Blakeslee (a fourth generation science writer) and Abi Blakeslee Kelleher (a clinical psychologist). In Santa Fe, Sandra lives with my life partner, Carl Moore, a consultant who helps communities and non profits solve difficult problems.
From Library Journal:
Having worked extensively with families in the midst of divorce, psychoanalyst Wallerstein is uniquely qualified to deal with the impact of divorce on the contemporary family. Basing her book on an authoritative and well-documented study of these families that she conducted over a ten-year period, she focuses on the heavy toll divorce takes on the children of divorcing families. She does an excellent job of giving the reader an inside look at the child's perspective on the loss of the intact family unit, though her title does promise a more positive outcome than she finally delivers. In fact, very few success stories are presented here--and that is the book's greatest weakness. Recommended for public, academic, and research libraries.
- Kim Banks, Columbia Univ. Libs.
Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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