A Journey Is Its Own Reward
Abstract
Journal of the American Psychiatric Nurses Association Contents Continued Point of View Toward Resolving the Issue: In-Home Psychiatric Nursing JanetM. Duffey, RN, C, BSN, and Marcia P Miller, RN,,CS, MS ............................... 104 Reader Services APNA Conference Announcement ................................ Inside front cover Information for Authors ............ ...................... 9A Information for Readers .................................. 11A Reader Communication .............. .................... 1 2A APNA Membership Application .................................1 3A CE Test .................................. 76 Cover: Paul Bourguignon, "Paris," 1973. Mixed media: gouache; 15 x 17.5 inches. From the private collection of Bobbie Fulton. A Journey Is Its Own Reward When lifelong travelers share their experience in prose or paint, the works they pro- duce often demonstrate how interdependent imagination and memory can be to creativity. Art critic Hall (1995) writes that Belgian-born photographer, painter, journalist, and novel- ist Paul Bourguignon (1906-1988) was able to squeeze several lifetimes into one as he moved from Europe to Haiti, through Central and South America, to Columbus, Ohio, where he lived with his wife Erika, an anthropologist. It was during this latter half of his life, as a resident of the United States, that Bourguignon exchanged a successful career in journalism and art witticism for another in drawing and