Handiwork

Handiwork
Author: Sara Baume
Publisher:
Total Pages: 128
Release: 2020-03-26
Genre: Creation (Literary, artistic, etc.)
ISBN: 9781916434257

In this contemplative short narrative, the artist and writer charts the daily process of making and writing, exploring what it is to create and to live as an artist

Handiwork

Handiwork
Author: Amaranth Borsuk
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2012
Genre: American poetry
ISBN: 9780977769872

Handiwork explores the relationship between writing and torture the ways poetry can wound us, and the ways it wrestles with language itself. Combining constraint-based writing with fragmented lyricism, the book considers the social and cultural role of the writer with respect to history and memory, and what gets lost in the transmission of trauma from one generation to the next.

Space

Space
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 111
Release: 2017
Genre: Outer space
ISBN: 9781946246035

God's Handiwork

God's Handiwork
Author: Richard J. Schrader
Publisher: Praeger
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1983-07-20
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0313236666

"Perhaps because well educated women formed a large part of the audience of early Germanic literature, it was quite sympathetic to them. God's Handwork offers a guide to the images of women in this literature. Focusing on the vernacular writings of Anglo-Saxon England and other Germanic territories in the same era, he discovers that many of these literary women were romanesque' abstractions and not meant to represent actual people.

Tomorrow 4 Sale!

Tomorrow 4 Sale!
Author: Oladele Madamidola
Publisher: BookRix
Total Pages: 92
Release: 2017-08-22
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 3743829088

Buying and selling take place every day, everywhere and all the time – destinies are sold and bought after rigorous negotiations in the market places of the world. Wondering why and how people could descend so low as to buy and sell destinies, the author of this motivational piece for teenagers and parents realised that both buyers and sellers are simply unconscious actors; the market, a stage. However, buyers are fewer than sellers in the market places of destiny – more and more people sell their tomorrow in the uncertainty of TODAY. This book is devoted to giving reasons tomorrow must be sold...!

The Black Heavens

The Black Heavens
Author: Brian R. Dirck
Publisher: Southern Illinois University Press
Total Pages: 243
Release: 2019-02-06
Genre: History
ISBN: 0809337029

Winner, Lincoln Group of New York Award of Achievement 2019 From multiple personal tragedies to the terrible carnage of the Civil War, death might be alongside emancipation of the slaves and restoration of the Union as one of the great central truths of Abraham Lincoln’s life. Yet what little has been written specifically about Lincoln and death is insufficient, sentimentalized, or devoid of the rich historical literature about death and mourning during the nineteenth century. The Black Heavens: Abraham Lincoln and Death is the first in-depth account of how the sixteenth president responded to the riddles of mortality, undertook personal mourning, and coped with the extraordinary burden of sending hundreds of thousands of soldiers to be killed on battlefields. Going beyond the characterization of Lincoln as a melancholy, tragic figure, Brian R. Dirck investigates Lincoln’s frequent encounters with bereavement and sets his response to death and mourning within the social, cultural, and political context of his times. At a young age Lincoln saw the grim reality of lives cut short when he lost his mother and sister. Later, he was deeply affected by the deaths of two of his sons, three-year-old Eddy in 1850 and eleven-year-old Willie in 1862, as well as the combat deaths of close friends early in the war. Despite his own losses, Lincoln learned how to approach death in an emotionally detached manner, a survival skill he needed to cope with the reality of his presidency. Dirck shows how Lincoln gradually turned to his particular understanding of God’s will in his attempts to articulate the meaning of the atrocities of war to the American public, as showcased in his allusions to religious ideas in the Gettysburg Address and the Second Inaugural. Lincoln formed a unique approach to death: both intellectual and emotional, typical and yet atypical of his times. In showing how Lincoln understood and responded to death, both privately and publicly, Dirck paints a compelling portrait of a commander in chief who buried two sons and gave the orders that sent an unprecedented number of Americans to their deaths.

Murder Most Crafty

Murder Most Crafty
Author: Maggie Bruce
Publisher: Berkley Hardcover
Total Pages: 352
Release: 2005
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780425202067

15 all new stories of criminal handiwork and the art of deduction.