21 |
DarknessGreen, Daniel R, Green, Daniel Read 20 December 2019 (has links)
During the long, dark night of a volcanic winter, a young man clashes with his father over the fate of five desperate survivors who have arrived outside the gates of the family compound. Yet he soon discovers true darkness lies within.
|
22 |
Courting the Virgin MaryPierce, Bethany M. 09 August 2006 (has links)
No description available.
|
23 |
MY LIFE AS A PINBALLDavis, Jennifer 31 August 2007 (has links)
No description available.
|
24 |
Try, Try Again: StoriesPecchio, Michael 22 May 2015 (has links)
No description available.
|
25 |
Down at the Bowl: A NovelEvans, Theresa Marie 22 June 2007 (has links)
No description available.
|
26 |
Bad Butterflies and Other StoriesGrigonis, Frank P. 06 December 2016 (has links)
No description available.
|
27 |
Pushing PoppiesAlokozai, Diana 01 April 2023 (has links)
After being dumped by the love of her life, a woman hopes to spite her ex and her commandeering mother by ‘ending it all’ - but each attempt to kill herself gets thwarted by her inability to do it right.
|
28 |
Sea StoriesHoskins, Robyn 19 May 2017 (has links)
Sea Stories is a collection of creative nonfiction essays centered around the growth of a young woman through her experiences with water and ships. The pieces trace the origins of the narrator's tie to water from a childhood involving boating with her dad to sailing a brigantine across the Pacific Ocean and then a six-year career as an officer in the U.S. Coast Guard. The narrator's relationship with her father, predominantly viewed through their shared intimacy with water, is a base theme for the whole collection. Other themes explored in individual essays include reckoning expectations with reality, explorations of the self in and against a group, gender dynamics in military service, and the influence of fiction on life. Sea Stories shows that what we think we know, what we may have only imagined, and on the water, that self-constructed reality can be a dangerous thing.
|
29 |
ScrubWilliams, Mark T 13 May 2016 (has links)
No description available.
|
30 |
You & I ; The stories we tell ourselves : turning trauma into narrative in Anne Enright's 'The Gathering', Niall Williams' 'History of the Rain', and John Banville's 'The Sea'Vincent, Florence Rose Anne January 2018 (has links)
Novel: You & I. 'You & I' is a coming-of-age tale tied up in the themes of trauma, memory and storytelling. It follows sixteen-year-old Esther, who is sent to live on the fictional Cornish island of Little Wimbish following the disappearance of her bipolar mother. Once on the island where her mother grew up, the damaged and reclusive Esther finds herself caught up in the lives, history and folklore of the Wimbish community - not to mention the mystery of her father's identity. As the story progresses and Esther becomes more invested in the fairy tale escapes promised by the island she now calls home, the voice switches back and forth between the second and first person - and we begin to suspect that our narrator may have inherited her mother's illness. This is a novel concerned with how we tell stories - about ourselves, our histories, and the places we live - and why. Essay: The Stories We Tell Ourselves: Turning Trauma into Narrative in Anne Enright's The Gathering, Niall Williams' History of the Rain, and John Banville's The Sea. How do we recover from trauma, and what role can storytelling play in the recovery process? This essay investigates the notion that in Anne Enright's The Gathering, Niall Williams' History of the Rain and John Banville's The Sea, each narrator carries out an attempt at recovery, enacted through a written recollection of their past traumas. Taking inspiration from various trauma theorists and psychologists, along with writer and trauma survivor Edward St Aubyn, this essay lays out the necessary steps which must be taken in order to integrate trauma into one's life story. By writing down their trauma, constructing a narrative which allows for a certain amount of invention, facing up to the dirtier and more difficult aspects of their experiences, and finally, sharing the finished narrative with another person, the trauma survivor may facilitate the beginnings of a recovery.
|
Page generated in 0.0131 seconds