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Articles 1 - 13 of 13
Full-Text Articles in Creative Writing
The Lantern Vol. 72, No. 1, Fall 2004, Nathan Dawley, Victoria Wynne, Thomas Richter, Susannah Fisher, Katy Diana, Sarah Kauffman, Trevor Strunk, Chris Curley, Meghan Bickel, Jan Cohen, Ashley Higgins, David Chamberlin, Jill Williams, Alison Shaffer, Abi Munro, Klaus Yoder, Caroline Meiers, Jennifer Mingolello, Daniel Bruno, Peter Bregman
The Lantern Vol. 72, No. 1, Fall 2004, Nathan Dawley, Victoria Wynne, Thomas Richter, Susannah Fisher, Katy Diana, Sarah Kauffman, Trevor Strunk, Chris Curley, Meghan Bickel, Jan Cohen, Ashley Higgins, David Chamberlin, Jill Williams, Alison Shaffer, Abi Munro, Klaus Yoder, Caroline Meiers, Jennifer Mingolello, Daniel Bruno, Peter Bregman
The Lantern Literary Magazines, 1933 to Present
• Jazz
• Bifocal Brainfreeze
• A Mug of Tea
• Autumn Blend
• Montana Skies
• Madeleine Parenthesis
• Ghosts Come Out at Night
• Time
• 144 Cromwell Road
• Market East
• Secret
• Stream
• What Might Have Been or What Never Was
• Buried Mirth
• Conversations With a Writer
• Churning Through
• Chum-Salmon Intentions
• Cages
• Lola Sang of Green Glass Landscapes
• Peg's Antiques
• Life at 120 Decibels
Fiction Fix 03, Thelma Young, Tim Gilmore, Sarah Stuart-Clarke, Jeff Geloneck, Blake Mccorkle, David Jordan, M. J. Howe, Stephanie Ouellette, Laura Havice, Christopher Sylvester, April Fisher, Gavin Lambert
Fiction Fix 03, Thelma Young, Tim Gilmore, Sarah Stuart-Clarke, Jeff Geloneck, Blake Mccorkle, David Jordan, M. J. Howe, Stephanie Ouellette, Laura Havice, Christopher Sylvester, April Fisher, Gavin Lambert
Fiction Fix
No abstract provided.
2004 Spring Quiz And Quill Magazine, Otterbein English Department
2004 Spring Quiz And Quill Magazine, Otterbein English Department
Quiz and Quill
No abstract provided.
The Lantern Vol. 71, No. 2, Spring 2004, Jay Richards, Tori Wynne, Jonathan Kiernan, Sarah Kauffman, Sarah Napolitan, Nathan Dawley, Larry Barr, Katy Diana, Alison Shaffer, Susannah Fisher, Trevor Strunk, Melanie Scriptunas, Dennis Kearney, John Ramsey, Dan Bruno, Klaus Yoder, Jessica Schoff, Jen Brink, Kate Chapman, Haley Turney
The Lantern Vol. 71, No. 2, Spring 2004, Jay Richards, Tori Wynne, Jonathan Kiernan, Sarah Kauffman, Sarah Napolitan, Nathan Dawley, Larry Barr, Katy Diana, Alison Shaffer, Susannah Fisher, Trevor Strunk, Melanie Scriptunas, Dennis Kearney, John Ramsey, Dan Bruno, Klaus Yoder, Jessica Schoff, Jen Brink, Kate Chapman, Haley Turney
The Lantern Literary Magazines, 1933 to Present
• Football Captain
• Grass Blades
• Identity Theft
• Her Shoulders
• Doing 100
• Watching the
• Fifteen Lines for Five
• Plague
• On the Occasion of Kissing You Less Than I Used To
• Decomposey
• Broomhandles
• Just a Minute
• War of the Words
• Seguidille
• At the End of One's Rope
• The Ride and Joe
• I Want Soft Curls
• Broken
• Stories of a Hypochondriac
• The TV is in Jail & My Mom is the Warden
Au Seuil Du Chaos : Devoir De Mémoire, Indicible Et Piège Du Devoir Dire, Issac Bazié
Au Seuil Du Chaos : Devoir De Mémoire, Indicible Et Piège Du Devoir Dire, Issac Bazié
Présence Francophone: Revue internationale de langue et de littérature
That literature has not entirely lost its means when faced with great human tragedies is a fact widely debated when it comes to the Holocaust. This text relies on a discussion of the unspeakable in order to reflect on the texts written about Rwanda’s genocide. Reading those texts’ thresholds reveals a tension of writing between history and fiction, “devoir de mémoire” and near resignation of speech.
[Introduction To] Vision’S Immanence: Faulkner, Film, And The Popular Imagination, Peter Lurie
[Introduction To] Vision’S Immanence: Faulkner, Film, And The Popular Imagination, Peter Lurie
Bookshelf
William Faulkner occupied a unique position as a modern writer. Although famous for his modernist novels and their notorious difficulty, he also wrote extensively for the "culture industry," and the works he produced for it—including short stories, adaptations, and screenplays—bore many of the hallmarks of consumer art. His experiences as a Hollywood screenwriter influenced him in a number of ways, many of them negative, while the films turned out by the "dream factories" in which he labored sporadically inspired both his interest and his contempt. Faulkner also disparaged the popular magazines—though he frequently sold short stories to them.
To what …
Trackers, Robin Rozanski
Trackers, Robin Rozanski
Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Trackers is a collection of short stories that attest to the oddities and complexities found even in the non-exotic middle-class American suburbs. The characters in these stories experience disappointments that result from the physical and emotional distancing of families. In "Tokens," a woman's attempts at revenge on her cheating husband are unsatisfying because she ends up feeling more alone than before. In "Trackers," eleven-year old Richard hunts for Bigfoot as he and his family cope with the emotional aftermath of his sister's suicide attempt. In these stories people struggle to maintain normalcy in their lives--sometimes through inappropriate means. When their …
The Snow Moon, Rebecca Lilly
The Snow Moon, Rebecca Lilly
Bryant Literary Review
A full moon sheared the tip of a pine. Lying in bed, a woodsman and
his wife saw it one December night. "Something must be done," said
his wife. "I know it's a sign."
The Hills Of Laura, Billy Lombardo
The Hills Of Laura, Billy Lombardo
Bryant Literary Review
It is true that I hated Hucker Norton. But I did not mean to crush his thumb.
He wasn't one of us, really. Even his name told you he was from some other place. We were Petey and Tommy and Davy and Matty, and he was Hucker.
America's Most Wanted, Erica Olsen
America's Most Wanted, Erica Olsen
Bryant Literary Review
I'm coming home from City Market when I spot the other vehicle in my drive.
"Look," I say. "Visitors."
St. Viggo, Karina Fuentes
St. Viggo, Karina Fuentes
Bryant Literary Review
Helen nearly suffocates me the night before the exhibit. She's walking
around on her heels, big cotton puffs between her calloused toes,
when she stumbles and falls on my head, which is stuffed beneath a
pillow. "I'll never sleep again," I groan.
Sampling, Lindsay Marks
In The Line Of Duty, Adam Drent