Viktor E Frankl
Praise for Embracing Hope
'Viktor Frankl gives us the gift of looking at everything in life as an opportunity'
Edith Eger, bestselling author of THE CHOICE
'[A] resonant collection of lectures and articles. . . .the message is moving and his lyrical prose will stick in readers’ minds. . . .an inspiring introduction to Frankl’s thinking.'
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
'These essays are without a doubt the products of the difficult, often alienating century in which they were written, but the wisdom—and, perhaps more importantly, hope—they offer during a time of competing global e ...
KIRKUS REVIEWS
'Viktor Frankl gives us the gift of looking at everything in life as an opportunity'
Edith Eger, bestselling author of THE CHOICE
'[A] resonant collection of lectures and articles. . . .the message is moving and his lyrical prose will stick in readers’ minds. . . .an inspiring introduction to Frankl’s thinking.'
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
'These essays are without a doubt the products of the difficult, often alienating century in which they were written, but the wisdom—and, perhaps more importantly, hope—they offer during a time of competing global e ...
KIRKUS REVIEWS
'Viktor Frankl gives us the gift of looking at everything in life as an opportunity'
Edith Eger, bestselling author of THE CHOICE
'[A] resonant collection of lectures and articles. . . .the message is moving and his lyrical prose will stick in readers’ minds. . . .an inspiring introduction to Frankl’s thinking.'
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
'These essays are without a doubt the products of the difficult, often alienating century in which they were written, but the wisdom—and, perhaps more importantly, hope—they offer during a time of competing global e ...
KIRKUS REVIEWS
Books by Viktor E Frankl
Articles featuring Viktor E Frankl
Man’s Search For Meaning by Viktor E. Frankl, a heartbreaking Holocaust survival story
Viktor E. Frankl was a highly respected psychiatrist in his native Austria when he was transported to Auschwitz in 1944. Against all odds, Frankl survived. After his liberation, and having lost his wife and his family, he wrote Man’s Search for Meaning about his experience in the death camps.