Voices on Visions

Voices on Visions
Author: Gary Truce
Publisher: Independently Published
Total Pages: 132
Release: 2022-01-24
Genre:
ISBN:

Gary Truce's poems cover a variety of subjects such as nature, personal relationships, and the cosmos. As a long-time professor of health and wellness, one might expect to see poems promoting wholesome relationships and healthy lifestyles. However, the poems' speakers are often not Truce and we read of troubled lives. Hence, the title, Voices on Visions, with Truce as poet persona playing many roles. The speakers are usually compassionate and sensitive indulging in the beauty and wonder of nature. Other speakers are lost, searching, depressed, romantic, or comic. Truce seems happiest when he communes with nature describing wildlife, landscapes, bodies of water, and an ever-changing sky. Sometimes the reader is taken beyond Earth to an exploration of the cosmic-at times with a Godly perspective with reassuring orderliness, and at other times with a human perspective filled with uncertainty, despair, folly, confusion, or amazement. Ultimately, Truce's high degree of optimism tips the balance in Visions. So, feel the crisp coolness of spring air, pour the maple syrup and melt the butter on blueberry pancakes while viewing the maple grove through the open kitchen window. As Truce writes, "And when the steam appears from the sugar shack-you know at last it's spring!"

Boston

Boston
Author: Shaun O'Connell
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2010
Genre: American literature
ISBN: 9781558498198

A rich selection of writings by notable preachers, politicians, poets, novelists, essayists, and diarists.

Voices & Visions

Voices & Visions
Author: Cristina Kirklighter
Publisher: Heinemann Educational Books
Total Pages: 166
Release: 1997
Genre: Education
ISBN:

Representing some of our finest established and emerging scholars on the subject of ethnographic research, this collection tackles the different issues and questions today's ethnographers face.

Voices of Vision

Voices of Vision
Author: Jayme Lynn Blaschke
Publisher: U of Nebraska Press
Total Pages: 209
Release: 2005-01-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0803262396

As the world around us becomes more fantastic, and science itself more surreal, the realms of science fiction and fantasy become correspondingly both more bizarre and more relevant. Voices of Vision offers a rare look into the inner workings of this realm and into the very thoughts and methods of those who make it tick: editors and writers of science fiction and fantasy, and creators of comic books and graphic novels. In wide-ranging interviews that are by turns intimate and thought provoking, irreverent and outrageous, Jayme Lynn Blaschke talks shop with some of the most interesting voices in these genres as well as the people behind them, such as current Science Fiction Weekly and former Science Fiction Age editor Scott Edelman. ø A host of authors talk to Blaschke about what it?s like to do what they do, how they work and how they started, and where they think the genre is headed. Blaschke talks to writers such as Robin Hobb, Charles de Lint, Patricia Anthony, and Elizabeth Moon; revered authors of comic books and graphic novels, including Neil Gaiman and Brad Meltzer; and icons such as Samuel R. Delany, Gene Wolfe, Harlan Ellison, and Jack Williamson. Editors such as Gardner Dozois, editor of Asimov?s Science Fiction magazine, discuss their publishing philosophies and strategies, the origins and probable directions of their magazines, and the broader influence of such ventures. For devoted reader, aspiring writer, and curious onlooker alike, these interviews open a largely hidden, endlessly engrossing world.

Folk Visions & Voices

Folk Visions & Voices
Author: Art Rosenbaum
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2013-10-01
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0820346497

Sampling virtually all of the old-time styles within the musical traditions still extant in north Georgia, Folk Visions and Voices is a collection of eighty-two songs and instrumentals, enhanced by photographs, illustrations, biographical sketches of performers, and examples of their narratives, sermons, tales, and reminiscences.

Voices, Visions, and Apparitions

Voices, Visions, and Apparitions
Author: Michael Freze
Publisher: Our Sunday Visitor
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1993
Genre: Apparitions
ISBN: 9780879734541

Some experiences go beyond ordinary reason. What does it mean when mystics see visions? And what does the Church teach about supernatural events like these? This is a book that takes these questions seriously.

Voices & Visions of the American West

Voices & Visions of the American West
Author: Barney Nelson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 232
Release: 1986
Genre: History
ISBN:

Photographed and edited by Barney Nelson. Introduction by Elmer Kelton. Memorial to Shawn Burchett by Helen & Peter Sarfatis.

Voices and Visions

Voices and Visions
Author: Daniel Francis
Publisher:
Total Pages: 352
Release: 2006-03-22
Genre: Canada
ISBN: 9780195421699

Voices and Visions introduces students to the development of Canada through the varied and rich perspectives of the Aboriginal, British, Francophone, and other groups. It also introduces students, in language they can understand, to active and responsible citizenship at the local, provincial, national, and global levels. Components include Teacher's Resource and Website. French version Voix et Visions available. For details, teachers in Alberta should contact the Learning Resources Centre (www.lrc.education.gov.ab.ca). Teachers in all other provinces, please contact Cheneliere Education (www.cheneliere.ca).

Visions and Voices

Visions and Voices
Author: Olivier H. P. Stephenson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2013
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781845231736

In the 1970s and 1980s Olivier Stephenson was very actively engaged in Caribbean theatre in New York. There he met a number of Caribbean playwrights, either already living there or making visits. He was looking for plays, they for theatres and performers. Out of this connection came this hugely important and unrepeatable collection of fourteen interviews with most of the founding figures of contemporary Anglophone Caribbean theatre. As the preface by Kwame Dawes indicates, the period of the interviews, from the mid 1970s into the 1980s, was a crucial one for the Caribbean theatre, as its most productive and revolutionary period, and a time when it was already taking on the variety of forms and locations that still characterise it today. Besides talking about their own influences, experiences, goals and aesthetic visions, each playwright contributes to a collective picture of Caribbean theatre being defined by its spaces ù diasporic or regional, proscenium or open air; the nature of its audiences ù a heated debate about the possibilities for a commercial theatre that has the work of Trevor Rhone at its heart - and the playwright's relationship to inherited theatre traditions and to specifically Caribbean cultural resources. Reflective, analytical, visionary, opinionated - these are lively interviews, not least because Olivier Stephenson asked each of the playwrights for their views on their peers - views sometimes given with acerbic frankness. This collection should, of course, have been published many years ago, and the subsequent deaths of eight of the interviewees make it something of a memorial, but the interviews themselves read as freshly as when they were recorded. With extensive annotations and end notes, and insightful introductions by Kwame Dawes and Olivier Stephenson, this is an essential book for anyone interested in contemporary Caribbean theatre and its history. Book jacket.