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Chapters: Create a Life of Exhilaration and Accomplishment in the Face of Change

Chapters: Create a Life of Exhilaration and Accomplishment in the Face of Change

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Guiding with Experience
Review: ...

Candice has captured the essence of the new age in which talented and multi-faceted people are struggling to not only live, but to flourish. Just as she led young people through the wilderness in Wyoming, she is now offering to lead others through the wilderness that is made up of the very different worlds of our personal and professional lives. To navigate our professional lives is not difficult nor is it a real stretch to navigate our personal lives. Most of us chose to navigate one and to ignore the other. But to navigate the wilderness of our professional lives and our personal lives at the same time is a new and very real challenge.

Candice has walked the road she writes about and so the reader can be confident that her advice is neither academic nor theoretical. Her advice may not work for every reader, but the philosophy and the path she describes will be a welcome map and signposts for many.

Chapters help us all understand that our lives and the world around us are evolving and that we have the choice to move onto the next chapter in our own personal life or not. More important, Chapters helps us to turn the page to the next chapter in our own lives. ...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Realistic, practical, and hopeful.
Review: As a psychotherapist and author who teaches the importance of facing fear head on (Embracing Fear, HarperSanFrancisco) I am always glad to see a book like Chapters that offers a realistic perspective, useful guidance and a hopeful message. Uncertainty is indeed the very nature of life, and Ms. Carpenter's well-written and organized book is based on the premise that coming to terms with that uncertainty (accepting that we cannot change this fact) is the key to feeling secure. (Isn't irony ironic?)

Like Gavin de Becker (Fear Less), Candice Carpenter has a way of pointing to what is real and reassuring us with it. The best news is that her reassurance --- backed by her own experience, thoughtful research, and genuine compassion --- has tremendous credibility.

I can think of at least a half dozen people I will recommend Chapters to immediately. And it certainly will go on the next edtion of my reading list for clients.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Helps you navigate the inevitable career ups and downs
Review: Chapters is the best career (and life) advice book I've read in many years. I felt like Carpenter was writing about my life as she shared her professional and personal life, adventures, and wisdom with me. The book is written in a way that really made me examine my life and, at the same time, it was incredibly comforting to me. I have already purchased four more copies for gifts and have recommended it to friends, relatives, coworkers, college students, executives, and board members.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Pul-eeze How narcisstic can you get?
Review: I have to admit, this book does have a good premise and some good practical exercises -

however - I could hardly relate to Ms. Carpenter and her assorted group of colleagues, all of whom seem rather "priviliged" in their varied media/outdoors/CEO status. You could hardly imagine these case studies really "suffered" with career problems; they all seemed rather "connected" (power brokered), monied and probably from families that eased the way for them to start off. The Chapters book was rather self-serving of Carpenter, who "discovered" a new career of writing/coaching (albiet with a ghost writer/collaborator). I was soooooo turned off by this book (like "oh, my my maid just quit, how bad can it get??"). I am a well educated professional myself but have none of the luxury and "connections" Carpenter seems to have. As a quite "elitist" book, I suggest it only if you went to an Ivy League school and/or were "born into" money. Sorry be be so negative, but that's what I came away with here.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Change Happens!
Review: If anyone had doubts about the importance of dealing with radical change in our lives, the events of September 11 will have dispelled them. Suddenly it became clear to all of us that there are no more signposts or security blankets. The extraordinary timeliness of this book astounded me more and more as I read.

Carpenter address the changes that have happened in her life with an openness that is completely refreshing. Most of us learned of her from the press during the Internet boom (and bust) and a great deal of the coverage has been anything but flattering. But the character of the writer with her guard down, looking back not only at her last chapter but those that led up to it, leaves the reader with a sense of her true depth. The vast amount of research she has done with other individuals and professionals in this area creates a perspective on this subject at a most critical time when we are all looking at a world defined by changes.

"Chapters" is a comprehensive examination of the one thing we all know to be true: change is the only certainty. Instead of looking at how to cope with change, Carpenter invites us to embrace and dance with it. Its clear- there will be massive changes in almost every area of your life for the rest of your life. Will you get stuck in the past and feel burdened by it or create a future that encompasses all the elements you personally need to thrive. The book shows that we all have the choice and contains many clear and inspiring stories of those that have navigated their way into a life they love.

My father used to quote "The past is prologue, we go on from here." Carpenter shows that we are all creating our own life, chapter by chapter, and have the capacity to use the inevitable changes as launch pads for greater happiness and fulfillment. An inspiring and valuable book that can't help but give each reader a new perspective on what it means to be a human being in the 21st century.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Pul-eeze How narcisstic can you get?
Review: Much of what the author is saying in this book looks good on paper; however, many suggestions are simply not practical for anyone in a low-income bracket. How many individuals could afford to have a year's wages set aside in the event they lose (or quit) their job? If you are a professional with considerable investments and savings, that may be possible, but for one who lives from paycheque to paycheque and just barely scrapes by, that idea is a dream not a realistic possibility.

On the positive side, there is much truth to the fact that an individual will have an average of nine different jobs through the course of their employable years. Life is indeed much like the chapters of a book - for everyone that ends another begins. In this respect, the author does help us to understand the various stages we go through as we close one chapter and begin another. There are some interesting anecdotes in the book and a lot of inspiration; however, readers will need to read the suggestions and apply what they feel will work for them based on their own unique personal situation. A "one-shoe-fits-all" approach cannot be found here because we have such varied income levels, disposable income, and financial responsibilities. Read the book for the tips it contains, then decide what will personally work for you and what will not.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: INTERESTING CONCEPTS BUT NOT FOR EVERYONE!
Review: Much of what the author is saying in this book looks good on paper; however, many suggestions are simply not practical for anyone in a low-income bracket. How many individuals could afford to have a year's wages set aside in the event they lose (or quit) their job? If you are a professional with considerable investments and savings, that may be possible, but for one who lives from paycheque to paycheque and just barely scrapes by, that idea is a dream not a realistic possibility.

On the positive side, there is much truth to the fact that an individual will have an average of nine different jobs through the course of their employable years. Life is indeed much like the chapters of a book - for everyone that ends another begins. In this respect, the author does help us to understand the various stages we go through as we close one chapter and begin another. There are some interesting anecdotes in the book and a lot of inspiration; however, readers will need to read the suggestions and apply what they feel will work for them based on their own unique personal situation. A "one-shoe-fits-all" approach cannot be found here because we have such varied income levels, disposable income, and financial responsibilities. Read the book for the tips it contains, then decide what will personally work for you and what will not.


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