Contributions

  • Jackson, Carlton. - Contributor

Publication

1996 - Bowling Green State University Popular Press, Bowling Green, Ohio, Ohio

Language

English

Word Count

30,250 words, Guess

Page Count

121 pages

Identifiers

  • Open LibraryOL973889M
  • ISBN-100879726997
  • OCLC Control Number34320384
  • Library of Congress Control Number96010815
  • Goodreads3884590

Classifications

  • DDC362.2/87/0973
  • LCCHV6548.U5 D53 1996

Description

This book relates the founding in America, and effectiveness of, a branch of the worldwide organization of volunteers known as the Samaritans, committed to the prevention of suicide through the simple means of "listening therapy." It is a description of the successful humanitarian efforts of "nonprofessional" volunteers by best-selling author Monica Dickens, herself a Samaritan. Monica Dickens, great-granddaughter of Charles Dickens, was known in England as a novelist; in America, as the founder of the U.S. Samaritans. Today Samaritans are in every large city of the country, some even with multiple branches. Volunteers work 24 hours a day, answering telephones or meeting troubled people, to try to give them, in nonjudgmental ways, the help they need to get their lives back in order. When Monica Dickens formed the Boston chapter, there were doubters. Psychiatrists, psychologists, and governmental bureaucrats, all said there was no chance that a Samaritan branch would work in that city. They did not realize the depth of Dickensian resolve. She meant to have a Samaritan branch in Boston, and later in Cape Cod. And, in the best traditions of her great-grandfather, so she did. Her story of the American Samaritans should be of interest to anyone who has ever pondered the human condition.

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