Received: from mgmt.utoronto.ca (fmgmt.mgmt.utoronto.ca [128.100.43.253]) by mail2.texas.net (8.8.8/2.4) with SMTP id TAA08491 for ; Wed, 18 Mar 1998 19:05:41 -0600 (CST) Received: by mgmt.utoronto.ca (5.65v4.0/1.1.10.7/26Jan98-0432AM) id AA00834; Wed, 18 Mar 1998 19:59:33 -0500 From: LouisFors Message-Id: Date: Wed, 18 Mar 1998 19:57:26 EST To: emweb@fmgmt.mgmt.utoronto.ca Mime-Version: 1.0 Subject: ED and agoraphobia Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Mailer: AOL 3.0 for Windows 95 sub 49 Sender: owner-emweb@fmgmt.mgmt.utoronto.ca Precedence: bulk Reply-To: emweb@fmgmt.mgmt.utoronto.ca Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII X-UIDL: d15551d1ed073b4a4021ab0efbc9e8f1 While scrolling through Amazon's healthy collection of ED books, I came upon a title I had never heard of before: _The House Without the Door: A Study of Emily Dickinson and the Illness of Agoraphobia_ by Maryanne M. Garbowsky, 1989. I don't know what position Garbowsky takes in the book and there was no further description available. If makes sense, however, that agoraphobia must have been raised, probably more than once, in meetings, articles, etc. where ED discussions take place. Anybody know anything about such lines of inquiry? Anybody know what the thrust of Garbowsky's book is? Louis Forsdale