Description
"In this posthumous collection of poet and teacher Donald Sheehan's reflections on Psalms and psalmic prayer, culled from his journals and teaching notes, you will find two quite different kinds of writing working in tandem: poetic and personal journaling by a man of faith, a scholar, a linguist, and, in the deepest sense, a teacher; alongside scholarly linguistic and poetic analysis by a man steeped in poetry who thought like a poet"--
About the Author
Sheehan, Donald: - Born in 1940, Donald Sheehan received a Ph.D. in English from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where he was also Managing Editor of Wisconsin Studies in Contemporary Literature. He taught at the University of Chicago, Franconia (NH) College, Plymouth (NH) State College, and Dartmouth College. He concurrently directed the Robert Frost Place Center for Poetry and the Arts in Franconia, NH (1978-2005), creating and directing a now internationally acclaimed poetry writing program. After becoming an Orthodox Christian in 1984, he spent the rest of his life revising all of his understanding and teaching to accord with his new faith. Along the way he taught himself Classical Greek, Biblical Hebrew, and LXX Greek. He died in 2010 in Charleston, SC, and is buried at Panagia Proussiotissa Monastery in Troy, NC.Sheehan, Xenia: - Xenia Sheehan, born in 1941, holds a BA in Philosophy (Antioch College, 1963) and an MA in Counseling (Norwich University); completed coursework towards an MA in English (UW-Madison), and studied theology at St. Vladimir's and St. Tikhon's Seminaries. She has raised two sons, created several alternative schools, built an off-grid house, worked as a counselor, and edited many books, beginning at the University of Wisconsin Press, then the University Press of New England, and finally freelancing. She has previously edited and published two posthumous volumes of her husband's work, as named above. Baptized in the Orthodox Church in 1989, she currently lives near the Holy Dormition Orthodox Monastery in Rives Junction, Michigan.