Book review: Lost Art of Connection

Today we have more reasons than ever to drift apart from one another. We feel estranged from former friends, family, fellow church workers, colleagues. Even our country seems more polarized.

In The Lost Art of Connection, veteran life coach Dr. Don Allen offers a way to heal relationships and rebuild working partnerships. The book is eminently practical and yet offers a big-picture view. With decades of experience coaching people to repair and rebuild broken trust, even in cross-cultural environments, Allen provides practical, proven, and challenging ways to communicate with others in ways to affirm relationships and improve the quality of teamwork and productivity.

At only 170 pages, the book is a quick read. Filled with practical advice and real-life stories, Allen’s volume reads easily and fluidly. Highly recommended!

The book is available through Amazon.

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Edward Wolfe

Edward Wolfe has been a fan of Christian apologetics since his teenage years, when he began seriously to question the truth of the Bible and the reality of Jesus. About twenty years ago, he started noticing that Christian evidences roughly fell into five categories, the five featured on this website.
Although much of his professional life has been in Christian circles (12 years on the faculties of Pacific Christian College, now a part of Hope International University, and Manhattan Christian College and also 12 years at First Christian Church of Tempe), much of his professional life has been in public institutions (4 years at the University of Colorado and 19 years at Tempe Preparatory Academy).
His formal academic preparation has been in the field of music. His bachelor degree was in Church Music with a minor in Bible where he studied with Roger Koerner, Sue Magnusson, Russel Squire, and John Rowe; his master’s was in Choral Conducting where he studied with Howard Swan, Gordon Paine, and Roger Ardrey; and his doctorate was in Piano Performance, Pedagogy, and Literature, where he also studied group dynamics, humanistic psychology, and Gestalt theory with Guy Duckworth.
He and his wife Louise have four grown children and six grandchildren.

https://WolfeMusicEd.com
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Ravel’s “Bolero”