7 Hours to Sofia: challenges and discoveries of a Peace Corps Volunteer

Author:   Louise Mae Hoffmann
Publisher:   Burning Daylight
ISBN:  

9780989724272


Pages:   372
Publication Date:   24 May 2017
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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7 Hours to Sofia: challenges and discoveries of a Peace Corps Volunteer


Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Louise Mae Hoffmann
Publisher:   Burning Daylight
Imprint:   Burning Daylight
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.544kg
ISBN:  

9780989724272


ISBN 10:   0989724271
Pages:   372
Publication Date:   24 May 2017
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

-J.D. Radke, author of levon a (Bascom Hill Press, 2016) 7 Hours to Sofia should be made into a movie to inspire America's retired baby boomers to keep on exploring the world around them, and to contribute more, not less, as we grow old. She sells the house and finds someone to take care of her beloved cats. Her keen description of place matches my own memories of Sofia and Varna from years back when I helped the Boy Scouts rebuild their organization in Bulgaria after the fall of the Soviet Union. Her ability to sympathize with the local children is beautiful, and while reading this book I can't help from longing there to be more American teachers and writers like Louise Mae Hoffmann. -Lucy M. Brusic, writer and editor. Author, A Thread Through Time: History of the Weavers Guild of Minnesota Right off, Louise tells us how hard it was to learn the Bulgarian, language which is written with Cyrillic characters and has many letter combinations that do not roll easily off the American tongue. She also tells us about the various accommodations she had to make to Peace Corps rules. For example, PCVs are not allowed to drive a car in the country where they are working, so she had to learn an elaborate system of fast and slow trains to get around the country. She also walked alot. I think this book should be assigned reading for all Peace Corps volunteers and others who are going to teach or work in a place where English is not the native language. I think it would be helpful even to ESL teachers in this country, since it gives a feeling for the frustrations of learning a new language as an adult. -Sharon D. Jenkins, Ph.D. Director of Library Services, Townsend Library NMSU Alamogordo Have you ever daydreamed about going on an Eastern European adventure? In 7 Hours to Sofia, you can without leaving the comforts of your coziest chair. 7 Hours to Sofia is the story of one intrepid older woman's adventurous quest to being a Peace Corps volunteer.


-J.D. Radke, author of levon a (Bascom Hill Press, 2016) ""7 Hours to Sofia should be made into a movie to inspire America's retired baby boomers to keep on exploring the world around them, and to contribute more, not less, as we grow old. She sells the house and finds someone to take care of her beloved cats. Her keen description of place matches my own memories of Sofia and Varna from years back when I helped the Boy Scouts rebuild their organization in Bulgaria after the fall of the Soviet Union. Her ability to sympathize with the local children is beautiful, and while reading this book I can't help from longing there to be more American teachers and writers like Louise Mae Hoffmann."" -Lucy M. Brusic, writer and editor. Author, A Thread Through Time: History of the Weavers Guild of Minnesota ""Right off, Louise tells us how hard it was to learn the Bulgarian, language which is written with Cyrillic characters and has many letter combinations that do not roll easily off the American tongue. She also tells us about the various accommodations she had to make to Peace Corps rules. For example, PCVs are not allowed to drive a car in the country where they are working, so she had to learn an elaborate system of fast and slow trains to get around the country. She also walked alot. I think this book should be assigned reading for all Peace Corps volunteers and others who are going to teach or work in a place where English is not the native language. I think it would be helpful even to ESL teachers in this country, since it gives a feeling for the frustrations of learning a new language as an adult."" -Sharon D. Jenkins, Ph.D. Director of Library Services, Townsend Library NMSU Alamogordo ""Have you ever daydreamed about going on an Eastern European adventure? In 7 Hours to Sofia, you can without leaving the comforts of your coziest chair. 7 Hours to Sofia is the story of one intrepid older woman's adventurous quest to being a Peace Corps volunteer.""


-J.D. Radke, author of levon a (Bascom Hill Press, 2016) 7 Hours to Sofia should be made into a movie to inspire America's retired baby boomers to keep on exploring the world around them, and to contribute more, not less, as we grow old. She sells the house and finds someone to take care of her beloved cats. Her keen description of place matches my own memories of Sofia and Varna from years back when I helped the Boy Scouts rebuild their organization in Bulgaria after the fall of the Soviet Union. Her ability to sympathize with the local children is beautiful, and while reading this book I can't help from longing there to be more American teachers and writers like Louise Mae Hoffmann. -Lucy M. Brusic, writer and editor. Author, A Thread Through Time: History of the Weavers Guild of Minnesota Right off, Louise tells us how hard it was to learn the Bulgarian, language which is written with Cyrillic characters and has many letter combinations that do not roll easily off the American tongue. She also tells us about the various accommodations she had to make to Peace Corps rules. For example, PCVs are not allowed to drive a car in the country where they are working, so she had to learn an elaborate system of fast and slow trains to get around the country. She also walked alot. I think this book should be assigned reading for all Peace Corps volunteers and others who are going to teach or work in a place where English is not the native language. I think it would be helpful even to ESL teachers in this country, since it gives a feeling for the frustrations of learning a new language as an adult. -Sharon D. Jenkins, Ph.D. Director of Library Services, Townsend Library NMSU Alamogordo Have you ever daydreamed about going on an Eastern European adventure? In 7 Hours to Sofia, you can without leaving the comforts of your coziest chair. 7 Hours to Sofia is the story of one intrepid older woman's adventurous quest to being a Peace Corps volunteer.


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