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Many of these are poems about women - wives and how he came to leave them, lovers and how they came to die and how he mourned, a young married mother whose baby he threw in the air and murmured PITTSBURGH to in between their trysts. Short, tender, very emotional poems from a man discinclined to easy emotion or postures. Poems to read at difficult junctures in your life and get perspective from. And, finally, poems with a great reach of ambition unusual nowadays in American verse. Poems that claim to talk to God, or at least sit with him for a while on the front porch.
Kamerman mentions that this book has been constructed on a foundation of psychological, occupational, organizational, and societal perspectives, and rightly so. Each of these avenues of thought presents a contrasting view. There is a little battle in each one of these words. How do we make decisions? Is it free will or societal pressure? Do we use cold logic or emotion? Is it necessary that we employ an absolutist or relativist approach? Ah, "absolutist or relativist", so there is an ethical tie...not only an ethical tie, but an ethical framework from which each decision should eminate. Somewhere between deontological and teleogical perspectives; between idealistic and contextual propositions, is an answer. Not necessarily the right answer, mind you, and definitely not an indisputed one, but rather a functional one. Therin is the basis for this book. Disaggregate the argument into its ethical components and then make a decision by negotiating responsibility; a daunting task which Kamerman approaches in a bold, successful manner, from his pensive input to each contribution he includes.