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When Jeff Creek leaves his wife Angie for the summer, he doesn't
mean forever, but his need to reignite his passion for writing and
discover the true meaning of love leads him to Ocean Shores,
Washington and a mysterious beach girl named Kaitlyn. His novel,
Will the Real Jeff Creek, becomes a narrative of their journey to
share the most powerful human experience on earth. On the way their
traumatic pasts propel them toward numerous obstacles and an
unexpected destination.
Acting Is Believing has trained generations of actors and remains
one of the most popular and influential classic Stanislavski-based
acting books over the past sixty years. Now in its thirteenth
edition, it has been reimagined for the art of acting in the
twenty-first century. Stanislavski expanded our understanding of
the mysterious process that results in truthful acting, devising
practical steps to pursue the most elusive element of the
artform—inspiration. Acting Is Believing: Stanislavski in the
21st Century, 13th Edition, introduces students to all the major
concepts of Stanislavski’s System of Acting, providing them with
a logical process through which they can master this complex art.
It breaks down even the most complex elements defining human
behavior in ways that are easy to digest. This new edition has been
greatly updated, including: Reworked chapters throughout to bring
Stanislavski’s theories to life in a language that speaks to
today’s actors A new approach to entering Stanislavski’s
Creative State, broken into an innovative five-part process Updated
discussions on anxiety, physical tension, social inhibitions, and
intimacy onstage Modified solo and group exercises Expanded
appendix on self-directed scene study Refined and updated glossary
of acting, theatre, and film terminology Acting Is Believing
remains grounded in Stanislavski-based technique training, yet this
latest text has evolved as a vital resource for twenty-first
century artists pursing acting careers in theatre, film, and
television. With a foreword by two-time Tony Award winning actor,
Norbert Leo Butz, Acting Is Believing continues to set the gold
standard in the art of acting for a new generation.
Acting Is Believing has trained generations of actors and remains
one of the most popular and influential classic Stanislavski-based
acting books over the past sixty years. Now in its thirteenth
edition, it has been reimagined for the art of acting in the
twenty-first century. Stanislavski expanded our understanding of
the mysterious process that results in truthful acting, devising
practical steps to pursue the most elusive element of the
artform—inspiration. Acting Is Believing: Stanislavski in the
21st Century, 13th Edition, introduces students to all the major
concepts of Stanislavski’s System of Acting, providing them with
a logical process through which they can master this complex art.
It breaks down even the most complex elements defining human
behavior in ways that are easy to digest. This new edition has been
greatly updated, including: Reworked chapters throughout to bring
Stanislavski’s theories to life in a language that speaks to
today’s actors A new approach to entering Stanislavski’s
Creative State, broken into an innovative five-part process Updated
discussions on anxiety, physical tension, social inhibitions, and
intimacy onstage Modified solo and group exercises Expanded
appendix on self-directed scene study Refined and updated glossary
of acting, theatre, and film terminology Acting Is Believing
remains grounded in Stanislavski-based technique training, yet this
latest text has evolved as a vital resource for twenty-first
century artists pursing acting careers in theatre, film, and
television. With a foreword by two-time Tony Award winning actor,
Norbert Leo Butz, Acting Is Believing continues to set the gold
standard in the art of acting for a new generation.
When Jeff Creek leaves his wife Angie for the summer, he doesn't
mean forever, but his need to reignite his passion for writing and
discover the true meaning of love leads him to Ocean Shores,
Washington and a mysterious beach girl named Kaitlyn. His novel,
Will the Real Jeff Creek, becomes a narrative of their journey to
share the most powerful human experience on earth. On the way their
traumatic pasts propel them toward numerous obstacles and an
unexpected destination.
Four Days of Silence is what critics mean when they talk about good
escapist entertainment. Drawing on many classic western
conventions, but always maintaining an originality and freshness,
Larry D. Clark's novel is a story of violence and brutality
contrasted by gentleness and love. It is the story of Adam
Chandler, willing to sacrifice everything to retrieve over 23
million dollars in gold taken from his great-grandfather by hostile
Indians in the high Simcoe Mountains of Washington State. Already,
the lure of the gold has called three generations of Chandlers to
their deaths. An Indian/white man love triangle over an Indian
girl, an ancient legend surrounding intrusion of the Yakama
Indians' sacred land in the Simcoe Mountains, a curse carried by
the Chandler family, and a volcanic eruption during Adam Chandler's
own death ceremony add up to a page-turner. Chandler finds himself
suspended over a bed of one hundred rattlesnakes - the death pit of
his ancestors - at the hands of the Ancient Ones. He finally
understands the Yakama Indians' secret as he stares down at his
great-grandfather's skeleton in the death pit. The will of the
Yakamas to preserve the secret of the Ancient Ones in the high
Simcoes is as strong as Adam Chandler's will to fulfill his own
family's destiny as both Levi Strongbull and Adam Chandler struggle
over their individual compulsions and their love for the same
woman. From beginning to end, Four Days of Silence offers strong
action and fine characterizations in an engrossing story that adds
up to great entertainment and a quick read.
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