A review by panickedhonking
Radical Wholeness: The Embodied Present and the Ordinary Grace of Being by Philip Shepherd

Did not finish book. Stopped at 39%.
The author makes a decent outline but pulls on a shallow understanding of a lot of different fields of knowledge to support his point. I get what he's going for, and I can vibe on maybe 60-75%, but it feels like he's looking at his feet and missing so much of what somatic experience can be. It's ironic that he sets up such a dichotomy between abstract and somatics when he spends so much time talking about how the mind and body dichotomy is such a problem. This book is so starved for a queered and cripped reading that I want to scream.