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We, the Lonely People:
Searching for Community

We, the Lonely People explores the loss of
community in America. It considers the ways in which we are trying to
rediscover a sense of community in rock concerts that become family for
a few hours, shopping malls where we search for familiar faces, and talk
shows with familiar voices. Instead of settling for "throwaway
intimacy," Keyes encourages readers to become more direct about their
need for one another and cultivate the communities that are already
sprouting in laundromats, self-help groups and corner pubs.

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excerpted in
Intellectual Digest, The Rotarian, National Elementary Principal,
Quote, Newsday

Ralph Keyes, as sensitive a young writer as
the country has today, knows what America has lost in the name of
progress and affluence. When I read this book there stirred in me the
hope that we might get it back. This is more than a fine book; it's a
must.
BILL MOYERS
This is a mosaic of hundreds of bits --
small personal experiences, keen observations, 'happenings' and events
described by friends and others. Only gradually does the reader realize
that the mosaic is a picture, powerful and profound. Keyes holds up a
mirror to our modern fractionated society and its isolated individuals.
He provides no final answers, but he has given us a provocative book one
does not forget.
CARL ROGERS |