Comments on: 11 of The Best Bookstores in San Francisco https://independentbookreview.com/2023/08/25/11-of-the-best-bookstores-in-san-francisco/ A Celebration of Indie Press and Self-Published Books Thu, 15 Feb 2024 21:18:26 +0000 hourly 1 By: marc sapir https://independentbookreview.com/2023/08/25/11-of-the-best-bookstores-in-san-francisco/comment-page-1/#comment-2875 Thu, 15 Feb 2024 21:18:26 +0000 https://independentbookreview.com/?p=48159#comment-2875 Hi Jaylynn,

Thanks for putting up all this good stuff. I’m hyping my just released memoir. If you’d like to review it I can send or drop you a copy.

Here are blurbs from the back cover:

“The years from 1961-1975, aka “The Sixties”, were among the most turbulent and dramatic periods in U.S. history. The young radicals who challenged the stifling political, cultural and sexual norms of that day didn’t win “The Revolution”, but they did make a lasting impact. We need more of them to share their stories before they are all gone. In Deja Vu with Quixotic Delusions of Grandeur, Marc Sapir steps up to the task as he narrates the 80 plus years of a radical life well lived as an activist and a doctor who faithfully served his working-class patients for decades…Deja Vu is a reminder of the joys and the travails of being a long-distance runner in the struggle for a better world.” –John Tarleton, Editor, The Indypendent Newspaper, New York City

“…While sharing his life as a physician and social activist committed to healing the individual and the world, Marc Sapir MD’s book is sprinkled with engaging side stories that makes it a reading pleasure. At the same time, it is an enduring and inspiring argument for healing a tormented world.” –John Swartzberg, MD, FACP, Clinical Professor, Emeritus Professor, School of Public Health, Division of Infectious Diseases & Vaccinology and Chair, Editorial Board, UC Berkeley Wellness Letter

“A whirlwind of thoughts and experiences, from medical work to political dissidence to half a century of encounters with both prominent and everyday people. Among many other things, I was struck by his portrait of Cesar Chavez as a human being, with flaws and virtues. Worth a read.” – Bob Egelko, journalist. 

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