31,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in 1-2 Wochen
payback
16 °P sammeln
  • Broschiertes Buch

Charles McCollough grew up struggling to communicate. He couldn’t express himself easily with words, and he was considered a "bad student." Fortunately, his athletic skill gave him a healthy outlet. Still, he remained different and ostracized. It took a dyslexia diagnosis to finally change his life. Picture This: My Journey from Words to Images is as much a memoir of dyslexia as it is McCollough’s life story. Picture This collects forty years of McCollough’s daily journal drawings made as he traveled throughout the world, working for social justice and growing his faith. It conveys his inward…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Charles McCollough grew up struggling to communicate. He couldn’t express himself easily with words, and he was considered a "bad student." Fortunately, his athletic skill gave him a healthy outlet. Still, he remained different and ostracized. It took a dyslexia diagnosis to finally change his life. Picture This: My Journey from Words to Images is as much a memoir of dyslexia as it is McCollough’s life story. Picture This collects forty years of McCollough’s daily journal drawings made as he traveled throughout the world, working for social justice and growing his faith. It conveys his inward journey as he claims his talent and gift as an artist and discovers how he can use it. McCollough now has two graduate degrees—Picture This will inspire readers who are dyslexic as well as those on their own spiritual journey.
Autorenporträt
Charles McCollough is a public speaker, sculptor and the author of ten non-fiction books. He holds an M. Div. and a Ph.D. in theology and served as the director for adult education for the United Church of Christ in Philadelphia and New York. Pursuing his lifelong love of art, he studied sculpture at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Johnson Atelier, The Princeton Art Association, and Mercer College. He has taught art and social ethics in colleges and seminaries, and since his retirement, he has traveled the globe to give lectures on human rights, peace and justice. He lives on a farm in Hopewell, New Jersey with his wife, where he works in clay, wood, bronze and stone in his barn studio.