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When Strangers Meet

How People You Don't Know Can Transform You

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Discover the unexpected pleasures and exciting possibilities of talking to people you don't know—how these beautiful interruptions can change you, and the world we share.
When Strangers Meet argues for the pleasures and transformative possibilities of talking to people you don't know. Our lives are increasingly insular. We are in a hurry, our heads are down, minds elsewhere, we hear only the voices we already recognize and rarely take the effort to experience something or someone new. Talking to strangers pulls you into experiences of shared humanity and creates genuine emotional connections. It opens your world. Passing interactions cement your relationship to the places you live and work and play, they're beautiful interruptions in the steady routines of our lives. In luminous prose, Stark shows how talking to strangers wakes you up.

Threaded throughout are powerful vignettes from Stark's own lifelong practice of talking to strangers and documenting brief encounters, along with a deep exploration of the dynamics of where, how, and why strangers come together. Ultimately, When Strangers Meet explores the rich emotional and political meanings that are conjured up in even the briefest conversations and unexpected connections with strangers. Stark renders visible the hidden processes by which we decide who to greet and trust in passing, and the unwritten rules by which these encounters operate. When Strangers Meet teaches readers how to start talking to strangers and includes adventurous challenges for those who dare.
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    • Kirkus

      July 1, 2016
      Don't be a stranger advises this short book on connecting with others.The publishing imprint of TED Talks offers another in a series of what might be considered self-help books, though world-help might be more in keeping with the ambition of these "small books about big ideas." Yes, suggests novelist and consultant Stark (Follow Me Down, 2011, etc.), reaching out to others you don't know, even with a simple "Hello," will likely make you feel better about yourself and about others--assuming the target of your connection isn't shocked or offended. Indeed, writes the author, "a shimmer of connection...can also have an effect on the larger political world, leading us away from fear and building toward openness, cooperation, and genuine understanding." Discomfort and even fear might prevent some from making such connections, and social context plays a significant role as well. Some cultures discourage even making eye contact with those one doesn't know, let alone initiating conversation. Some differences--gender, race, class, income--can lead to an imbalance that puts more of the power and/or risk on one side than the other. And most of us are fine with what the author terms "civil inattention," which maintains the illusion of functioning privately or in solitude while in a public place, barely acknowledging the presence of others. "Civil inattention in these situations, the park and the cafe, the theater and the concert, also amounts to a denial of shared experience," writes Stark. "Sometimes that's a terrible loss." If you let yourself get to know someone of another religion or race or nationality, you have learned to see her as something other than the "other," and "it opens up your idea of who counts as human." Hardly groundbreaking but a pleasant little book about making connections.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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