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From Microsoft to Malawi: Learning on the Front Lines as a Peace Corps Volunteer

Product ID : 45955143


Galleon Product ID 45955143
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About From Microsoft To Malawi: Learning On The Front

Product Description In this compelling narrative, Michael L. Buckler draws readers into the challenging, yet rewarding world of the Peace Corps. Inspired by his journals, the book recounts his life as a Peace Corps teacher after a heartbreaking divorce and a demanding legal career prompted him to make a change. Assigned to a village school in Malawi, Buckler opens his tiny home to three boys, embarking with them on a journey of cross-cultural discovery, personal sacrifice, and transformative growth. Determined to help his village, Buckler collaborates with community leaders to build a boarding school for girls. As momentum builds, a powerful bureaucrat tries to shut down the project and Buckler becomes discouraged. As he agonizes over whether to leave, the village takes matters into its own hands in a moving display of the persistent, courageous spirit of Malawi. Review Modest without being demure, candid without being coy, Buckler draws readers into a journey of discovery, a commitment of soul, body, and mind to his task of helpfulness. He conveys a unique eye for descriptive detail that also scans the bigger picture of the peoples' plight and awareness of the world around them . . . This book should be read by anyone interested in community development within cultural contexts in Africa, or anyone who just wants to be absorbed without pause in a good read. -- Ralph Nader, consumer advocate, lawyer, and author For anyone interested in current African affairs, this is the book for you. Another valuable addition to Peace Corps Experience literature, it was written and published only two years after the author hugged his African family and returned. Not a timid soul, Michael L. Buckler describes his home in Malawi, and explores several controversial topics such as the overlap of services offered by the Peace Corps and non-governmental agencies, the U.S. foreign aid package, American subsidies and their effect upon other nations, Volunteer use of anti-depressants and Volunteer sexual debauchery....Don't hesitate ― buy this book! ― Peace Corps Worldwide From Microsoft highlights the 'interconnectedness' of humanity, the importance of cultural awareness and need for education. Buckler, like many Peace Corps volunteers, wore many hats that exposed him to the complexity of development. From garden and tree-planting projects, to building a girls boarding house, he learned enduring lessons about development work and policy. ― Duke Today 'Holy crap. We won't know the real deal until we step off the plane,' said Buckler to his fellow Peace Corps volunteers before 'embarking into the great beyond' in Africa. Nine thousand miles and one year later, the 32-year-old lawyer begins to understand the depth of commitment demanded by his mission in Malawi and the truth of his initial assessment. Teaching in a village there for two years meant sharing his small home with three boy students as he learned language (Chichewa), customs, and culture. Buckler's multicultural and transformative personal growth will keep readers' attention as he reports on how he learned the nuanced meanings of commitment, collaboration, and friendship in this exploration of self and place developed from journal entries. Buckler describes with keen powers of observation details of village life that capture the imagination as he sees beyond those boundaries to the larger global landscape. Readers interested in global community development and armchair travelers will applaud. ― Booklist Written like a journal, this fish-out-of-water memoir is clearly heartfelt. Buckler left a law career to take a two-year Peace Corps assignment in a village school in Malawi. He here chronicles his arrival and subsequent adjustment to life in rural Africa. He was supported through the difficult transition and mentored in work and in life by the school headmaster―their relationship is a particularly touching piece of the story. Buckler, in turn, served as mentor (and housemate) to