But of all the fresh considerations of Carson's work, there's one that stands out for me at the
moment — a recent paper by two researchers of rhetoric and writing who dug in
on «Silent Spring» drafts, notes and revisions and found that Carson had a remarkable and rare trait for someone so committed to
raising public concern about a pressing environmental
issue.
We speak with someone one day who is thinking of selling in the next» xx» period of time and then in short order their home is listed
on the MLS and your name is not
on the listing which infuriates you, when in real life after you met with them doing everything right (answered all their questions, asked all the right questions and was not pushy just consultation... displaying professionalism) one day unbeknownst to you one of the sellers has a health or life
issue raising the need for immediate change and they hit open houses and Boom... they buy one, and that agent was in the right place at the right time and lists their home (with your annual calendar
on their fridge and your notepad
on their counter beside your branded fly swatter) and you have a What - Happened -
Moment.