|
|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
Metro is a unique multi-genre creative writing text that provides exercises and prompts to help students move beyond terms and concepts to active writing. By using "guided writing," the authors help students through the creative processes in fiction, poetry, drama, and creative nonfiction. A mini-anthology with relevant exercises makes this sourcebook complete.
Fiction. Lyrical, provocative, and deeply haunting, THE TIME OF
QUARANTINE, takes us into a near-distant future of post-human
environmental collapse to chronicle the tale of a boy raised alone
in the woods by computers at the end of the world--or is it? As the
sole surviving member of an ill-fated Intentional Community
designed to escape world's end plagues and convinced he is alone on
earth, the boy--now a man--is determined to carry out the final
wishes of his father and fulfill his stoic duties of merely being
human. But when he discovers, as if by accident, that everything
he's always imagined to be true is, instead, a lie, he decides to
leave the safety of his little spinning plot of spaceship earth and
go back into the world to find out what comes next.
Fiction. These stories, powerful eco-fables of down-home Americana,
take place during the relentless rollover from one millennium to
the next in a world remarkably like our own--and not. In one, for
example, a girl exquisitely tuned to the sorrows of history ends up
in a city blasted by light where she gets the chance to try
dreaming things over. In another, a boy born lacking the ability to
distinguish phonetic difference grows up to be a famed musician.
There's a dapper, square-headed astronomer who discovers the origin
of stars, and a tiny-footed climber who scales the tallest
mountains in the world at the end of time. As mothers and children,
husbands and wives struggle to make sense of whatever still
remains, the one thing they share in common is their determination
not to miss a single beat. Or, as one narrator remarks, "The next
time we imagine the world, let's try to imagine it whole."
|
|