Sing Ronnie Blue
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Author | : Gary D. Wilson |
Publisher | : Rager Media Incorporated |
Total Pages | : 191 |
Release | : 2007 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 9780979209178 |
Gary D. Wilson's much-awaited debut novel, set in Bartlett's Junction, Kansas, details the lives of its two main characters, Ronnie Blue, son of a local junk yard owner, and John Klein, son of the president of the town's only bank, from their high school friendship and subsequent drifting apart to their fateful reengagement five years later during an Independence Day celebration in their hometown. An intensely moving story, Wilson's novel takes a long and honest look at the economic and class divisions in our society that produce people such as Ronnie Blue. Wilson's depth of character, coupled with a sophisticated style and poetic wordplay that calls to mind The Great Gatsby, makes Sing, Ronnie Blue a book that should appeal to a broad and appreciative audience.
Author | : Editors Of Writers Digest Books |
Publisher | : Penguin |
Total Pages | : 761 |
Release | : 2008-07-01 |
Genre | : Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | : 1582976627 |
For 28 years, Novel & Short Story Writer's Market has been the only resource of its kind exclusively for fiction writers. Covering all genres from romance to mystery to horror and more, this resource helps you prepare your submissions and sell your work. This must-have guide includes listings for over 1,300 book publishers, magazines, literary agents, writing contests and conferences, each containing current contact information, editorial needs, schedules and guidelines that save you time and take the guesswork out of the submission process. With more than 100 pages of listings for literary journals alone and another 100 pages of book publishers, plus special sections dedicated to the genres of romance, mystery/thriller, speculative fiction, and comics/graphic novels, the 2009 edition of this essential resource is your key to successfully selling your fiction.
Author | : Editors Of Writers Digest Books |
Publisher | : Penguin |
Total Pages | : 781 |
Release | : 2008-07-01 |
Genre | : Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | : 1582976643 |
For 28 years, Novel & Short Story Writer's Market has been the only resource of its kind exclusively for fiction writers. Covering all genres from romance to mystery to horror and more, this resource helps you prepare your submissions and sell your work. This must-have guide includes listings for over 1,300 book publishers, magazines, literary agents, writing contests and conferences, each containing current contact information, editorial needs, schedules and guidelines that save you time and take the guesswork out of the submission process. With more than 100 pages of listings for literary journals alone and another 100 pages of book publishers, plus special sections dedicated to the genres of romance, mystery/thriller, speculative fiction, and comics/graphic novels, the 2009 edition of this essential resource is your key to successfully selling your fiction.
Author | : Gary D. Wilson |
Publisher | : John Hunt Publishing |
Total Pages | : 219 |
Release | : 2016-01-29 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 1785351907 |
Suppose your more than mildly irritating leech of a sister calls you, as she usually does wanting money, only this time she says instead that she has cancer and in the course of the conversation challenges you to write the story of her life. You say, sure, you'll do that but you'll tell it the way you see it. The tale that emerges involves not only the dying sister, Connie, but brother Len as well. And it's also about "me," the sibling invited to narrate their shared story and whose interplay of memory and imagination raises the question of whether "the truth" of Connie's life - or of anyone's for that matter - can ever be known.
Author | : Ellis M. Goodman |
Publisher | : John Hunt Publishing |
Total Pages | : 408 |
Release | : 2016-12-09 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 1785354876 |
The Keller Papers is a fast-moving espionage story based in 1980s Eastern Europe, including factual events and personalities of the times, which have become so relevant in today’s strained East/West political environment.
Author | : Rita Dragonette |
Publisher | : Simon and Schuster |
Total Pages | : 382 |
Release | : 2018-09-17 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 1631524623 |
A Readers' Favorite Book Award Finalist and Best Book Awards Finalist * Featured in Ms. Magazine, Brit + Co, Hypertext Magazine, BookTrib, Publishers Weekly, Writer's Digest and more! An enthralling historical novel about brave women set during the peak of the Vietnam War and told through the rare perspective of a young woman, who traces her path to self-discovery and a “Coming of Conscience.” If you loved Kristin Hannah's latest novel The Women, this one's for you. On September 14, 1969, Private First Class Judy Talton celebrates her nineteenth birthday by secretly joining the campus anti-Vietnam War movement. In doing so, she jeopardizes both the army scholarship that will secure her future and her relationship with her military family. But Judy’s doubts have escalated with the travesties of the war. Who is she if she stays in the army? What is she if she leaves? When the first date pulled in the Draft Lottery turns up as her birthday, she realizes that if she were a man, she’d have been Number One―off to Vietnam with an under-fire life expectancy of six seconds. The stakes become clear, propelling her toward a life-altering choice as fateful as that of any draftee. Judy’s story speaks to the poignant clash of young adulthood, early feminism, and war, offering an ageless inquiry into the domestic politics of protest when the world stops making sense.
Author | : Gary D. Wilson |
Publisher | : John Hunt Publishing |
Total Pages | : 284 |
Release | : 2024-02-23 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 1803414634 |
As the turbulent 1960s draw to a close, an inexplicable crime forces two young Americans who are teaching in Africa, and those around them, to confront issues of motivation, culture and belonging.
Author | : Richard Lee Cook |
Publisher | : Xlibris Corporation |
Total Pages | : 732 |
Release | : 2020-04-03 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 1796087130 |
The Fire and Rain Chronicles, It's where the souls of the living dead are nothing more than earth-bound spirits. At the least, shadowed memories of those endlessly wandering in the darkness of despair and hopelessness. Bound by destiny's shackles in a blacken abyss. Rarely does a glimmer of light slice through the dense curtain of madness. One survivor still lives to tell the story of this ill-fated family up on "Hell's Half Acre".
Author | : Jessica Jewett |
Publisher | : Lulu.com |
Total Pages | : 373 |
Release | : 2007-02-01 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 143030488X |
Set during the bloody American Civil War, From the Darkness Risen is a story of courage, valor and what it means to be a family. A young couple with a toddler son, the Cavanaughs endure the explosion of civil war, separation and the struggle of keeping the family farm out of enemy hands. Robert, a captain in the Stonewall Brigade, is captured during the fight at Sand Ridge, Virginia, and taken to a Union prison in Illinois. When Isabelle hears the frightening news, she abandons her post as a nurse in Staunton, Virginia's Confederate Army Hospital with futile hopes of securing her husbandâÂÂs freedom. Along the way, Isabelle sees the brutality of war through her deeply religious sensitivity, and struggles with the traditional roles of a 1860s wife and mother against her desire to be something more. When her companion, Eva Reed, sabotages the dangerous escape, Isabelle and Robert find themselves fighting for their lives. Will they make it out of enemy territory alive?
Author | : Joseph Bruchac |
Publisher | : University of Arizona Press |
Total Pages | : 412 |
Release | : 1994 |
Genre | : Literary Collections |
ISBN | : 9780816514861 |
An unprecedented gathering of more than 300 Native writers was held in Norman, Oklahoma, in 1992. The Returning the Gift Festival brought more Native writers together in one place than at any other time in history. "Returning the Gift," observes co-organizer Joseph Bruchac, "both demonstrated and validated our literature and our devotion to it, not just to the public, but to ourselves." In compiling this volume, Bruchac invited every writer who attended the festival to submit new, unpublished work; he then selected the best of the more than 200 submissions to create a collection that includes established writers like Duane Niatum, Simon Ortiz, Lance Henson, Elizabeth Woody, Linda Hogan, and Jeanette Armstrong, and also introduces such lesser-known or new voices as Tracy Bonneau, Jeanetta Calhoun, Kim Blaeser, and Chris Fleet. The anthology includes works from every corner of the continent, representing a wide range of tribal affiliations, languages, and cultures. By taking their peoples' literature back to them in the form of stories and songs, these writers see themselves as returning the gift of storytelling, culture, and continuance to the source from which it came. In addition to contributions by 92 writers are two introductory chapters: Joseph Bruchac comments on the current state of Native literature and the significance of the festival, and Geary Hobson traces the evolution of the event itself.