Highlight Highlights Itinerary

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Highlight Highlights Itinerary 12-Day Journey in the Footsteps of Odysseus and Penelope GREECE 11 NIGHTS MODERATE PRICES FROM $417 PER NIGHT GUIDED TOUR | SPIRITUAL | CITY CENTER | GREAT FOR SOLO TRAVELERS | SIGHTSEEING HIGHLIGHTS Set out on an inspiring, 12-day journey of ancient Greece with author, teacher and filmmaker Phil Cousineau. Take a journey 3,000 years back in time, across Homer’s wine-dark sea. Discover the legends of Heroes and Heroines, Gods and Goddesses and connect with the mythic power of the ancients. From the heart of Athens to Odysseus’ home island of Ithaka, embark on an unforgettable tour with lifelong researcher, seeker and storyteller Phil Cousineau. With teachings from his books, films and tudies s, Phil takes you on a voyage through the history of civilizations that flourished in the distant past. With wisdom and wonder to be discovered at every turn, this 12-day tour with Sacred Earth Journeys is one you’ll remember forever. ITINERARY Arrive Athens Monday, April 18th PAGE 1 You will be met at Athens International Airport and transferred to your hotel in the heart of Athens. Depending on your arrival time, you may have an opportunity to explore this ancient city on your own. Athens, the capital and largest city in Greece, dominates the Attica periphery. One of the world’s oldest cities, it is full of myths, mysteries and legends. Steeped with a rich history that spans around 3,400 years, the city is home to many sacred ancient sites, monuments and landmarks. A fusion of old and new, Athens is also a cosmopolitan metropolis buzzing with lively activity and vibrancy. If you arrive early enough, they recommend a visit to the National Archaeological Museum, founded at the end of the 19th century to house and protect antiquities from all over Greece, thus displaying their historical, cultural and artistic value. The museum features many artifacts associated with the Homeric epics, such as the golden Mask of Agamemnon, the bust of the Minotaur and the Aphrodite of Cnidus. In the evening, you will gather at the hotel for a welcome drink before walking as a group to the Plaka district for the Welcome Dinner. It will be held at the Palia taverna Kritikou with its splendid view of the Acropolis and Lycabettus. You will get to know your tour leader and fellow travelers as you savor traditional Greek cuisine and admire the stunning views of ancient Athens. (Overnight in Athens at the Hotel Hermes or similar.) Athens + Corinth Canal + Mycenae + Sparta Tuesday, April 19th Enjoy a traditional Greek breakfast followed by the first of the Long Conversations: “Epic Storytelling in Classical Athens.” Afterward, the coach will take you to the Peloponnesus, crossing the astonishing architectural marvel of the Corinth Canal, begun by the Roman emperor Nero, who abandoned the project, which was finally er sumed in 1881 and completed in 1893. After a short stop at the canal, you will visit the ancient citadel of Mycenae and its neighboring museum, with its cyclopean walls and history of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra. Here, you will spend the morning exploring the archaeological site with a very special guest, Agamemnon Dasis, the great-great-grandson of the man who lodged the archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann (discoverer of Troy) when he excavated Mycenae in 1876. After your tour of the citadel you will visit the nearby tholos or beehive huts, then lunch at Agamemnon’s restaurant and hotel, La Belle Helene, named after Helen of Troy. Over the years many luminaries have stayed here, including André Malraux, Stephen Spender, Jack Kerouac, Rebecca West, Lawrence Durrell, Henry Miller, Virginia Woolf, Carl Jung, Freya Stark, and J. K. Rowling. Breakfast and lunch are included today. (Overnight in Sparta at the Menelaion Hotel or similar.) Sparta + Menelaion + Gytheion + Kranai Islet Wednesday, April 20th After breakfast at the hotel, you will gather for a morning discussion based on Phil’s book, Who Stole the Arms of the Venus de Milo? The famous statue was inspired by the story of the torrid love affair between Paris, the prince of Troy and Helen of Sparta. It's a tale that has inspired more art than any other one from classical times. The conversation will prepare you for your visit today to the ruins of the palace she shared with King Menelaus. For it was here that the Trojan prince Paris, enchanted by the goddess of love, Aphrodite, came to seek out Helen, regarded as the most beautiful woman in the world, who was likewise under Aphrodite’s love spell. To catch a glimpse of the importance of these mythic figures, you will visit one of the most unusual sites in Greece, the strange pyramid-shaped Sanctuary of Menelaus and Helen, where they were worshipped as gods for centuries, and according to Pausanius, were buried there. You will enjoy a traditional lunch either in Sparta or Gytheion, depending on timing. After your intriguing morning, you will visit Gytheion, the ancient seaport for the war-hardened Spartans—a beautifully preserved town—then, you'll visit the Kranai islet. According to legend, this was the port from which Helen and Paris sailed for Troy, their tryst igniting the most famous war in history. Breakfast and lunch are included today. (Overnight in Sparta at the Menelaion Hotel or similar.) PAGE 2 Sparta + Olympia Thursday, April 21st After breakfast at the hotel, the group will gather for a morning discussion about the curious relationship in the ancient world between athletics and warfare, as embodied at Ancient Olympia. Considered a national shrine for the ancient Greeks, the site housed many treasures and works of art ranging from temples, monuments, sacred altars, theatres and statues. Recent findings have pushed the origins of the competitions there from the traditional 776 B.C.E. to around 1250 B.C.E. Your visit will enrich your understanding of the role of athletics in Homer, who is often regarded as the first sportswriter in the world because of his intricate description of the so-called Funeral Games for the fallen hero Patroclus. Together, you will make your way to the ancient gymnasium and the palaestra (wrestling forum), the Temple of Zeus, one of the original Seven Wonders of the World, the Temple of Hera, where the Olympic Torch is ignited for every modern Olympics, and the wondrous Archaeological Museum, which features the astounding statue of Hermes by Praxiteles. You will then walk through an old olive grove for a visit to the Olympics Museum, which features a collection of Olympic torches, medals and memorabilia of the Baron Pierre de Coubertin, the visionary who revived the Modern Olympic Games in the belief it would revive the spirit of the well-lived life. This evening, Phil will lead a late evening discussion based on his book, The Olympic Odyssey, followed by a visit to a local taverna for some traditional music (at own expense). Breakfast and lunch are included today. (Overnight in Olympia at the Hotel Antonios or similar.) Olympia + Ithaka Friday, April 22nd Following your hotel breakfast, there will be a discussion about the symbolic power of Ithaka in mythology, psychology, poetry and the arts. After the talk, you will take the coach to the port of Patras, where you will catch a four-hour ferry to Pisaetos Harbor, Ithaka, then on to the nearby beautiful harbor town of Vathi. Tonight you will enjoy a fabulous meal and traditional Greek music together. Breakfast and dinner are included today. (Overnight in Ithaka at the Mentor Hotel or similar.) Ithaka + Stavros Saturday, April 23rd After breakfast, there will be a group reading of passages from the Odyssey that are set in Ithaka. You'll discuss the way the translations have shape-shifted over the centuries. You will also explore the centuries-long debate, which dates back to the 3rd century BCE, about the specific location of Homer’s Ithaka. After lunch, you will be guided by Spyros Couvaras, a member of the Odyssean Studies Center to the town square of the beautiful village of Stavros to see a scale model of ancient Ithaka, and the small but important Archaeological Museum of Stavros, where you will see fragments of twelve bronze ceremonial tripods in honor of Odysseus found in the nearby Polis caves. One is famously inscribed: EYXHN ODYCCEI, a reference to the gift of Alcinoos, King of Phaecia, to Odysseus. Then you will take a short drive by coach to the reputed ruins of Odysseus and Penelope’s palace that is referred to locally as Homer’s School. Archaeologists date it back to the 8th century. The most recent excavations, culminating in 2010, have fueled the controversy about the existence of a real Odysseus, reminiscent of Heinrich Schliemann’s digs at Troy, in Turkey, which many believe provides a historical basis for the Trojan War. After your visit to these haunting ruins, you will visit the actual Polis Cave, where the “Odysseus cult” was ritually celebrated for eight centuries. Time permitting, you will end your visits with a drive to the peak of Pilata Hill, which overlooks the Three Seas that Homer describes are visible from Odysseus’ Ithaka, and finally ot the Homeric “Melanydros Fountain.” Breakfast and lunch are included. (Overnight in Ithaka at the Mentor Hotel or similar.) PAGE 3 Ithaka on Easter Sunday Sunday, April 24th Today, you'll enjoy a morning of storytelling and discussion about the Iliad and the Odyssey, including recent mythopoetic renderings of Homer’s myths, including Margaret Atwood’s The Penelopiad, and Madeline Miller’s Circe, and today’s theme of “Ithaka After Odysseus.” After the “Long Conversation”, there will be an attempt to visit the Archaeological Museum of Vathi to see its beautiful collection of rare vases from the so-called “Dark Ages,” as well as vases from the Geometric Period and striking Ithacan bronze coins from Classical times.
Recommended publications
  • Episode 28: Phil Cousineau— the Art of Pilgrimage Thursday, May 14, 2020
    Episode 28: Phil Cousineau— The Art of Pilgrimage Thursday, May 14, 2020 [music] You are not moving, you are being moved. You are not singing, you are being sung. You are not praying, you are being prayed Prayed at the speed of love. Janet Conner You are not moving. Now, that's a pretty funny thing to say right now because it's true. None of us are moving [laughter]. But nevertheless, even when you're inside your own home, walking from room to room, the truth is you are not moving; you are being moved. This is a radical, 180 degree different understanding of being alive. You are not moving; you are being moved. You are not singing; you are being sung. You are not praying; you are being prayed, prayed at the speed of love. Welcome. I'm Janet Conner, Prayer Artist, and you have arrived at perfect timing—I like to call it speed of love timing—to episode #28 in Praying at the Speed of Love. This, my new podcast, is dedicated to very unusual, very intimate conversations about prayer, a topic that not a lot of media is interested in talking about. But I'm talking about real prayer, deep prayer, body prayer, mystical prayer, original prayer. And when I say original prayer… that's such an interesting word, "original," because it means simultaneously both, well, way back when, "originally," and at the same moment, anything an artist creates is original, right? And so in one word prayer has these two wings of being forever ancient… I'm madly in love with prayers that probably go back to Paleolithic times, the Labyrinth, the Rosary, which has nothing to do with any patriarchal Christian religion.
    [Show full text]
  • H J KRAMER ECKHART TOLLE EDITIONS NATARAJ PUBLISHING NAMASTE PUBLISHING Contents New Titles
    NEW WORLD LIBRARY FALL 2018 H J KRAMER ECKHART TOLLE EDITIONS NATARAJ PUBLISHING NAMASTE PUBLISHING Contents New Titles The Meaning of Happiness............................................................................................2 The Holy Wild................................................................................................................3 Rescuing Ladybugs........................................................................................................4 The Resilience Toolkit.....................................................................................................5 The Divorce Hacker’s Guide to Untying the Knot..........................................................6 Mysterious Realities........................................................................................................7 The Emotionally Healthy Child......................................................................................8 Step into Your Moxie.....................................................................................................9 Jeff Herman’s Guide to Book Publishers, Editors & Literary Agents 2019..................10 The Life You Were Born to Live....................................................................................11 Feeling Better.............................................................................................................12 Smart Ass....................................................................................................................13 The Jewel of
    [Show full text]
  • Hero's Journey
    Hero’s journey “The Hero’s Journey” redirects here. For other uses, see is too broad or general to be of much usefulness in com- The Hero’s Journey (disambiguation). parative mythology. Others say that the hero’s journey is In narratology and comparative mythology, the mono- only a part of the Monomyth. The other part is a sort of different form, or color, of the hero’s journey. Call to 1 Terminology Adventure Supernatural Return aid (Gift of Threshold Campbell borrowed the word monomyth from Joyce’s the Goddess) KNOWN Guardian(s) Threshold Finnegans Wake (1939). Campbell was a notable scholar UNKNOWN (beginning of transformation) of James Joyce's work and with A Skeleton Key to Finnegans Wake (1944) co-authored the seminal anal- The Helper ysis of Joyce’s final novel.[3] Campbell’s singular the Atonement Mentor monomyth implies that the “hero’s journey” is the ul- Hero's timate narrative archetype, but the term monomyth has Journey occasionally been used more generally, as a term for a mythological archetype or a supposed mytheme that re- Transformation occurs throughout the world’s cultures.[4] Omry Ronen Helper Abyss referred to Vyacheslav Ivanov's treatment of Dionysus as death & rebirth an “avatar of Christ” (1904) as “Ivanov’s monomyth”.[5] The phrase “the hero’s journey”, used in reference to Campbell’s monomyth, first entered into popular dis- The twelve stages of the hero’s journey monomyth following the summary by Christopher Vogler (originally compiled in 1985 as course through two documentaries. The first, released in a Disney studio memo): 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Joseph Campbell the Hero's Journey
    Joseph Campbell The Hero's Journey PDF generated using the open source mwlib toolkit. See http://code.pediapress.com/ for more information. PDF generated at: Tue, 25 Mar 2014 14:08:47 UTC Contents Articles Monomyth 1 The Hero with a Thousand Faces 12 References Article Sources and Contributors 17 Image Sources, Licenses and Contributors 18 Article Licenses License 19 Monomyth 1 Monomyth Joseph Campbell's monomyth, or the hero's journey, is a basic pattern that its proponents argue is found in many narratives from around the world. This widely distributed pattern was described by Campbell in The Hero with a Thousand Faces (1949).[1] An enthusiast of novelist James Joyce, Campbell borrowed the term monomyth from Joyce's Finnegans Wake.[2] Campbell held that numerous myths from disparate times and regions share fundamental structures and stages, which he summarized in The Hero with a Thousand Faces: A hero ventures forth from the world of common day into a region of supernatural wonder: fabulous forces are there encountered and a decisive victory is won: the hero comes back from this mysterious adventure with the power to bestow boons on his fellow man.[3] Campbell and other scholars, such as Erich Neumann, describe narratives of Gautama Buddha, Moses, and Christ in terms of the monomyth[citation needed] and Campbell argues that classic myths from many cultures follow this basic pattern.[citation needed] Summary In a monomyth, the hero begins in the ordinary world, and receives a call to enter an unknown world of strange powers and events. The hero who accepts the call to enter this strange world must face tasks and trials, either alone or with assistance.
    [Show full text]
  • Beyond Forgiveness, Reflections on Atonement with Phil Cousineau
    Beyond Forgiveness, Reflections on Atonement David Van Nuys interviews Phil Cousineau Shrink Rap Radio Episode #264 Phil Cousineau: When we attempt to say we're sorry and we seek forgiveness, well what happens is very often the world doesn't believe us, we don't believe ourselves, but there's this missing key. Atonement says you need to sacrifice something. You need to prove with an actual act, a human act, that you can put things right again. David Van Nuys: That was the voice of my guest Phil Cousineau speaking about the importance of atonement in the process of seeking forgiveness. Phil Cousineau is the editor of the 2011 book, Beyond Forgiveness: Reflections on Atonement. Phil is an award-winning writer and film maker, teacher and editor, lecturer and travel leader, story teller and TV host. His fascination with the art, literature, and history of culture has taken him from Michigan to Marrakesh, Iceland to the Amazon, and worldwide search for what the ancients call the soul of the world. With more than 25 books and 15 script writing credits to his name, the omnipresent influence of myth in modern life is a thread that runs through all of his work. His other books include Stoking the Creative Fires, Once and Future Myths, The Art of Pilgrimage, The Olympic Odyssey, The Hero's Journey, and Wordcatcher. Now here's the interview. David Van Nuys: Phil Cousineau, welcome to Shrink Rap Radio. Phil Cousineau: Good morning. I'm happy to be with you. David Van Nuys: I'm really happy to have you here and to have this opportunity to meet with you and to discuss your work.
    [Show full text]
  • Win Spr2014.Pdf
    Contents New Titles The Life Organizer........................................................................................................................2 Get It Done..................................................................................................................................3 Marriage Meetings for Lasting Love...........................................................................................4 And There Was Light....................................................................................................................5 Fast Fiction..................................................................................................................................6 The Boy Who Died and Came Back............................................................................................7 Sacred Sound...............................................................................................................................8 Happy @ Work.............................................................................................................................9 Encyclopedia of Goddesses & Heroines....................................................................................10 Building Your Business the Right-Brain Way..............................................................................11 Misadventures of a Parenting Yogi............................................................................................12 First Intelligence........................................................................................................................13
    [Show full text]
  • Author List for Advertisers This Is the Master Set of Authors Currently Available to Be Used As Target Values for Your Ads on Goodreads
    Author List for Advertisers This is the master set of authors currently available to be used as target values for your ads on Goodreads. Use CTRL-F to search for your author by name. Please work with your Account Manager to ensure that your campaign has a sufficient set of targets to achieve desired reach. Contact your account manager, or [email protected] with any questions. 'Aidh bin Abdullah Al-Qarni A.G. Lafley A.O. Peart 029 (Oniku) A.G. Riddle A.O. Scott 37 Signals A.H. Tammsaare A.P.J. Abdul Kalam 50 Cent A.H.T. Levi A.R. Braunmuller A&E Kirk A.J. Church A.R. Kahler A. American A.J. Rose A.R. Morlan A. Elizabeth Delany A.J. Thomas A.R. Torre A. Igoni Barrett A.J. Aalto A.R. Von A. Lee Martinez A.J. Ayer A.R. Winters A. Manette Ansay A.J. Banner A.R. Wise A. Meredith Walters A.J. Bennett A.S. Byatt A. Merritt A.J. Betts A.S. King A. Michael Matin A.J. Butcher A.S. Oren A. Roger Merrill A.J. Carella A.S.A. Harrison A. Scott Berg A.J. Cronin A.T. Hatto A. Walton Litz A.J. Downey A.V. Miller A. Zavarelli A.J. Harmon A.W. Exley A.A. Aguirre A.J. Hartley A.W. Hartoin A.A. Attanasio A.J. Jacobs A.W. Tozer A.A. Milne A.J. Jarrett A.W. Wheen A.A. Navis A.J. Krailsheimer Aaron Alexovich A.B. Guthrie Jr. A.J.
    [Show full text]
  • Le Simplegadi
    Associazione Laureati in Lingue Università degli Studi di Udine Le Simplegadi Rivista internazionale on-line di lingue e letterature moderne International refereed online journal of modern languages and literatures http://all.uniud.it/simplegadi ISSN 1824-5226 Living Together on this Earth: Eco-Sustainable Narratives and Environmental Concerns in English Literature/s Anno XV, Numero 17 Novembre 2017 Le Simplegadi 2 Le Simplegadi http://all.uniud.it/simplegadi Rivista accademica on-line dell’Associazione dei Laureati in Lingue Straniere dell’Università di Udine International refereed online journal of modern languages and literatures Direttore responsabile / Editor-in-chief: Antonella Riem Segretario di redazione / Editor: Stefano Mercanti Comitato scientifico / Scientific Board: Satish C. Aikant (H. N. B. Garhwal University, India) Roberto Albarea (University of Udine, Italy) Paolo Bartoloni (University of Galway, Ireland) Paolo Bertinetti (University of Turin, Italy) Maria Bortoluzzi (University of Udine, Italy) Veronica Brady (†) (University of Western Australia, Australia) Alessandra Burelli (University of Udine, Italy) Maria Luisa Camaiora (University “Cattolica” Milan, Italy) Silvia Caporale Bizzini (University of Alicante, Spain) Franca Cavagnoli (University of Milan, Italy) Saumitra Chakravarty (Bangalore University, India) Andrea Csillaghy (University of Udine, Italy) Anna Pia De Luca (University of Udine, Italy) Maria Renata Dolce (University of Salento, Italy) Cynthia vanden Driesen (Edith Cowan University, Australia) Riane
    [Show full text]
  • Remembering the Way an Enquiry Into a Journey Of
    Remembering the Way An Enquiry into a Journey of Loss, Healing and Emergence Jenni Harris 2011 Remembering the Way An Enquiry into a Journey of Loss, Healing and Emergence Jennifer Rae Harris MA Experiential and Creative Arts Therapy (MIECAT) Dip. Transpersonal Art Therapy (Ikon) Submitted in total fulfilment of the requirements of the degree of Professional Doctorate in Creative Arts Therapy November 2011 MIECAT, Melbourne, Australia To arrive where you are, to get from where you are not, You must go by a way wherein there is no ecstasy. In order to arrive at what you do not know You must go by a way which is the way of ignorance. In order to possess what you do not possess You must go by the way of dispossession. In order to arrive at what you are not You must go through the way in which you are not. And what you do not know is the only thing you know And what you own is what you do not own And where you are is where you are not. T. S. Eliot, Four Quartets (1952, p. 127) ii Abstract The opportunity to undertake a professional doctorate in process-oriented research coincided with my need for a period of deep reflection into my life and my experiences of death and loss. The resulting heuristic, arts-based research enquiry, based on a journal that I kept during this time, will provide the basis for my ongoing creative arts therapy practice. I offer this thesis as a resource to people practising in the areas of therapy, trauma, life review and qualitative research.
    [Show full text]
  • Table of Contents
    TABLE OF CONTENTS Assembled by the Gurdjieff Foundation of Illinois with permission from The Society for the Study of Myth and Tradition, Inc. INSTRUCTIONS BACKGROUND Four times a year, since 1976, Parabola Magazine has brought us essays, fiction, reviews, interviews and artwork from around the world. Each issue has focused on one topic or theme to be explored from a variety of perspectives. We believe that Parabola Magazine issues from 40 years ago continue to be highly relevant to today’s seekers of truth. Recognizing that the many treasures buried in Parabola Magazine were indeed buried, we offer this searchable electronic index of every issue published by the Society for the Study of Myth and Tradition, Inc. It is our intent to continually update this file as new issues are released. THE PRODUCT The Topical Index lists each issue of Parabola Magazine with the topical description (assigned by Parabola), date, and volume/issue number. The Tables of Content have been enhanced to include significant items that were not identified on the printed Table of Contents pages including many book reviews which are often fascinating essays. SPECIAL FEATURES 1. If you click on a topic name in the Topical Index you will be taken instantly to the corresponding Table of Contents page. Simply scroll up to return to the Topical Index. 2. At the top of each Table of Contents page, you may click this icon: In a few seconds, you will be taken to the page on Parabola’s website where, with a few clicks, you may buy a hard copy or digital version of that issue.
    [Show full text]
  • The Religious Hero's Journey in Selected Cinema
    THE RELIGIOUS HERO'S JOURNEY IN SELECTED CINEMA ____________ A Thesis Presented to the faculty of California State University Dominguez Hills ____________ In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Masters of Arts in Humanities ____________ by Dale S. Hull Summer 2019 Copyright by DALE S. HULL 2019 All Rights Reserved Dedicated to my wife Kimberly and my mom Sandy. iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I am grateful to Professor Lyle Smith for his guidance and patience, to my friend Steve Barbone for his encouragement, Matt Slater and Kimberly Sherman for their help, Fran Joselyn for getting me started, and the entire Humanities External Degree Program staff and faculty at California State University, Dominguez Hills. iv TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE COPYRIGHT PAGE .......................................................................................................... ii DEDICATION ................................................................................................................... iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ............................................................................................... iv TABLE OF CONTENTS .....................................................................................................v ABSTRACT ....................................................................................................................... vi CHAPTER 1. INTRODUCTION ...........................................................................................................1 2. THE HERO’S JOURNEY OF THE DEITY .................................................................11
    [Show full text]
  • Table of Contents
    TABLE OF CONTENTS Assembled by the Gurdjieff Foundation of Illinois with permission from The Society for the Study of Myth and Tradition, Inc. INSTRUCTIONS BACKGROUND Four times a year, since 1976, Parabola Magazine has brought us essays, fiction, reviews, interviews and artwork from around the world. Each issue has focused on one topic or theme to be explored from a variety of perspectives. We believe that Parabola Magazine issues from 40 years ago continue to be highly relevant to today’s seekers of truth. Recognizing that the many treasures buried in Parabola Magazine were indeed buried, we offer this searchable electronic index of every issue published by the Society for the Study of Myth and Tradition, Inc. It is our intent to continually update this file as new issues are released. THE PRODUCT The Topical Index lists each issue of Parabola Magazine with the topical description (assigned by Parabola), date, and volume/issue number. The Tables of Content have been enhanced to include significant items that were not identified on the printed Table of Contents pages including many book reviews which are often fascinating essays. SPECIAL FEATURES 1. If you click on a topic name in the Topical Index you will be taken instantly to the corresponding Table of Contents page. Simply scroll up to return to the Topical Index. 2. At the top of each Table of Contents page, you may click this icon: In a few seconds, you will be taken to the page on Parabola’s website where, with a few clicks, you may buy a hard copy or digital version of that issue.
    [Show full text]