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Kimberly White    

Author of "The Shift: How Seeing People as People Changes Everything"

Kimberly White is the perpetually amused mother of some very theatrical children, and the lucky wife of the funniest person she’s ever known. Her nine months of research for The Shift included dozens of hours working alongside nursing home employees in offices, showers, vans, patient rooms, kitchens, and one very creepy basement.

She was raised in a boisterous and opinionated family of eight children, where you had to eat quickly and talk loudly or risk being starved and forgotten (sorry Rachel). Every summer the entire brood would travel to her grandfather’s farm to run wild with an anarchic horde of cousins and a spiteful herd of llamas. It was the kind of magical childhood people write books about, and maybe someday she will.

Kimberly earned a degree in philosophy, studying under C. Terry Warner and serving as his longtime research assistant. She was editor of her department’s undergraduate philosophy journal and copy editor for Epoche: A Journal for the History of Philosophy. She has also worked for the Arbinger Institute as a group instructor and as a first-draft editor of Leadership and Self-Deception.

She and her husband, Zachary, spent about two years in England being deliriously happy and then eleven years in New York City being deliriously crowded. They recently moved from Harlem to the village of Pawnee, Illinois, where they have gloried in mid-western sunsets and accumulated pets at an alarming rate.

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Interview: Kimberly White, Author of 'The Shift: How Seeing People ...
I recently had a chance to sit down with Kimberly White, author of the new book The Shift: How Seeing People as People Changes Everything, a fascinating look  ...

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