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About the Author

Works by Joan Bolker

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Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Bolker, Joan
Birthdate
1939
Gender
female
Education
Harvard University (BA|1960|MA|Ed.D|)
Occupations
clinical psychologist
psychotherapist
Agent
Robin Straus
Relationships
Leffert, Robert D. (brother)
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
Newton, Massachusetts, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Massachusetts, USA

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Reviews

13 reviews
Like many self-help books, Joan Bolker invites us, the naive and eager doctoral candidates, into the dissertation writing process and navigation. While this acts more like a demystifying chronicle of the writing process, I believe it falls short of providing a structure to the dissertation. This allowed the large research project to be malleable to each person and young writer, which was a bit of a disadvantage. The perfect companion to this book would be something like "Save the Cat!" by show more Blake Snyder or "How to Write a Movie in 21 Days" by Viki King. While both of these outwardly deal with movie screenplays, they provide a structure and guide map to develop characters (or theories) and demonstrate their transformations (your placement in the research and field).

In the end, Bolker has provided an extremely useful resource that is better enriched by other writers helping their readers with form and structure. Perhaps there is a project here that 1) conglomerates all of this information into a pointed state for the reader/dissertator and 2) modernizes the language and methodologies since many of these books still use typewriters as the state-of-the-art production tool. Yet, this is for another time.
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[3.75/5] The premise of this book is to present a way to find out your own personal working rhythm, program and style so that you can finish an academic document (thesis /dissertation). Although Bolker does deliver on this promise, the book sometimes feels a bit useless, but not because it's actually bad. I believe that this book is best read twice: once as a regular book, and once more throughout the writing process itself, so that the otherwise excellent advice gets to your attention right show more when it's needed.

In general, there are many good things to come out of this book, and it's a good (and short enough) read for anyone looking forward to write a thesis. However, as the author says, it's not a magical formula and will require some elbow grease just to figure out what works best for every one. To be read in parts, through your dissertation writing process.
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½
This was perhaps the most practical and encouraging book I read during my doctoral work. The chapter concerning the beginning process of writing was as motivational as anything that I've read about writing.
Bolker has compiled a selection of essays to help the writer along whether your issue is tackling writer's block, finding voice or simply finding the heart to get started and keep with your writing. The most important lessons show you that you're not alone in the ways that you feel about writing and in particular your own writing. The authors use personal stories to illustrate the lessons they've picked up through the years. The lessons stick and provide ideas that you can incorporate into show more your own. What I was pleased most by was the inclusion of women writers and theirs stories of coming to write and coming to find voice. This is a volume that I'll go to whenever I'm feeling stuck unsure or just in need a good story. show less

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Statistics

Works
2
Members
1,003
Popularity
#25,716
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
10
ISBNs
4

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