Summary of Becky Cooper's We Keep the Dead Close
Everest Media
Availability:
Ebook in EPUB format. Available for immediate download after we receive your order
Ebook in EPUB format. Available for immediate download after we receive your order
Publisher:
Everest Media LLC
Everest Media LLC
DRM:
Watermark
Watermark
Publication Year:
2022
2022
ISBN-13:
9798822543584
Description:
Please note: This is a companion version & not the original book.
Sample Book Insights:
#1 On January 7, 1969, the second day of reading period, five anthropology doctoral students were assembled in a lecture hall at the top of the Peabody Museum. If they failed, they risked getting moved off the PhD track into a terminal master’s.
#2 I live in a mansion called Apthorp House, which is part of Harvard’s Adams House dorms. It is haunted, and the ghost is General Burgoyne, a British officer who was held captive in the house during the Revolutionary War.
#3 I have been haunted by a murder that took place a few steps away. It was told to me like a ghost story: a young woman, a Harvard graduate student of archaeology, was bludgeoned to death in her off-campus apartment in January 1969. Her body was covered with fur blankets and the killer threw red ochre on her body.
#4 I had grown up in a family where ordering a drink with dinner was considered an unnecessary indulgence. At Harvard, I could talk about philosophical pragmatism over breakfast and spend hours picking apart David Foster Wallace with my tutorial leader. I learned that I was supposed to choose courses based on the professors rather than the course content.
Sample Book Insights:
#1 On January 7, 1969, the second day of reading period, five anthropology doctoral students were assembled in a lecture hall at the top of the Peabody Museum. If they failed, they risked getting moved off the PhD track into a terminal master’s.
#2 I live in a mansion called Apthorp House, which is part of Harvard’s Adams House dorms. It is haunted, and the ghost is General Burgoyne, a British officer who was held captive in the house during the Revolutionary War.
#3 I have been haunted by a murder that took place a few steps away. It was told to me like a ghost story: a young woman, a Harvard graduate student of archaeology, was bludgeoned to death in her off-campus apartment in January 1969. Her body was covered with fur blankets and the killer threw red ochre on her body.
#4 I had grown up in a family where ordering a drink with dinner was considered an unnecessary indulgence. At Harvard, I could talk about philosophical pragmatism over breakfast and spend hours picking apart David Foster Wallace with my tutorial leader. I learned that I was supposed to choose courses based on the professors rather than the course content.
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