BOOKS THAT REMEMBER

BOOKS THAT REMEMBERBOOKS THAT REMEMBERBOOKS THAT REMEMBER
  • MY MEMOIR
  • SHANKSVILLE BOOK
  • reviews
  • meet the author
  • More
    • MY MEMOIR
    • SHANKSVILLE BOOK
    • reviews
    • meet the author

BOOKS THAT REMEMBER

BOOKS THAT REMEMBERBOOKS THAT REMEMBERBOOKS THAT REMEMBER
  • MY MEMOIR
  • SHANKSVILLE BOOK
  • reviews
  • meet the author

ending up creative

“Many of us have dreamed of what we will do after retirement, creative endeavors we never had time for before. For those of us still hesitant to try something new, Bill Thompson’s book will surely be an inspiration. Reading this book you will learn how one person, apprehensive about developing his latent talents, did so anyway, and experienced productive fulfillment in later life.”

--Clare Cooper Marcus, author of Iona Dreaming: The Healing Power of Place 


"Thompson tells a fascinating tale of his search for self-expression through drawing."

--Dr. Betty Edwards, author of Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain


“Bill Thompson is a restless soul. He retires from his job as a magazine editor and he’s got big plans. He wants to write. He wants to draw. He wants to sing and play harmonica and mandolin. Nothing comes easy, but everything comes. 

Bill's writing, his drawing and his music are an inspiration. And so is this book. Read it. It will make you a better person.”
— Ari L. Goldman, author of The Late Starters Orchestra


 

"Ending Up Creative: My Search For Renewal Through The Arts by J. William Thompson is a memoir that chronicle's the author's life. A twenty-year career at a magazine ends abruptly when the editorial values that have long sustained publications from being mere advertisements are forcefully revoked, and Thompson becomes a retiree sooner than expected. Retirement wasn't as comfortable or easy to slide into as one would imagine. This changes when he hits a spiritual stride and picks up some charcoal. Thompson can sketch, and he's rather good at it. These artistic milestones lead to other endeavors, including the performing arts. Thompson marks his evolution by the timeframes that correlate to major world issues, travel, and plain old-fashioned daily events. A chorus leads to musical instruments leads to solos, and Thompson's life is reinvigorated in kind.
      My dad once retired for a handful of weeks before he did what he wanted to do, got it out of his system, and decided that the fulfillment he got in his professional life was far greater than anything he could find on a golf course or bowling. He did what J. William Thompson never had the chance to do, which is to leave when he wanted and simply because he wanted to. As a Christian, Thompson will see that this is exactly how he was meant to find himself, and under what circumstances, and the “after” he describes in his golden years with his wife and his artistic pursuits are well-written and wholly engaging. He really has an excellent talent for sketching but what I adored was the music scene with bluegrass, particularly when he pulls out a harmonica. Drawing, music, and now writing: a triple treat that has put his work out into the world for us to enjoy in Ending Up Creative, and I have enjoyed it! Very highly recommended."

 

--Reviewed by Jamie Michele for Readers' Favorite


from memory to memorial

"A poignant, compelling, and engrossing account that answers the question: What happens next in an ordinary place where
nothing will ever be normal again?"--Frederick Steiner, Dean of the School of Architecture, University of Pennsylvania. 


"Thompson's skill as a writer results in engaging literary quality.... Includes intimate and emotional details of individuals with diverse, and sometimes opposing, perspectives"--Sarah Dziedzic, The Public Historian, University of California Press


"Translates actual events and their original meaning to future generations... Lays out the facts, while clearly exploring the emotional impact of Flight 93 on Shanksville, the famlies, and the larger public.--Daniel J. Nadinicek, Landscape Journal.

"Explores how, and why,  Americans make mass tragedies memorable in public space." -- Erika Doss, author of Memorial Mania. 


   


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