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Scales can fly and feathers swimHope can water lifeless sandsBut can a way be forged through fireWhen one must fall where none can stand? The rains of True Realm are failing, and no-one knows why. The lack of water turns prey into predator, and predator back into prey - the danger to all has never been greater. Journeying far to collect their allocated water ration, a detour to assist an ill-fated serpent in direr need than they brings Amber and her friends to the savanna lands: the stronghold of the vulturine Harpy tribe who are experts in drought survival living alongside the wildest creatures still gracing the Realm. In recognition of their kindness to the serpent, the Harpies offer the company a gift of great antiquity with far-reaching consequences. Yet it will require a far greater sacrifice for the rains to return...
Who the H is Henry David Tarantula?That's what George P. Stone, Mayor of William, Arizona, wants to know. Particularly since he is the mayor's opponent in the upcoming election.Henry David Tarantula lives in a cave above the town of William. He has assumed the unusual name as he portrays himself as the Henry David Thoreau of the Southwest. His desert residency is modeled after Thoreau's famous stay at Walden Pond. In his political campaign, Henry David stands for water preservation, and he rails against air conditioning and exotic pollen.Mayor Stone's version of Walden is a Waldon construction tractor. He promotes progress in the form of watermelon farming, and he promises to clean the caves of their free-loading inhabitants and rampant beer cans, which he avidly recycles.The political campaign is all so philosophical until Henry David meets Virginia Stone, the mayor's daughter. She is stalking him with a flower-intensive science project. The three-way power struggle is joined by an endangered wolf from Chihuahua, Mexico. The desert blooms, beer cans roll, and animals dream in this humorous environmental love story.
Written across four decades, The Art of Restoration elicits multiple voices that trace a trajectory from a complex childhood "Living in a Split" to empowered, even erotic, old age. The collection is, as one poem underscores, "Elemental" in its intensity and draws strength from experience. Reflecting a rural childhood among the working class, the poems invite readers to remember the places, moments, and people that animate, delight, and comfort us-if we let them.
Rabbi Isaac Abrams escaped the Holocaust and wandered in search of mission and meaning. He arrived in a small university town walking the quiet streets at night in vocal argument with . . . whom? One evening he encountered Jack Israel, a professor of social psychology and an apostate Jew. Both night walkers were in conversation, one with the unseen, the other with two Newfoundland dogs. Together they began to patrol the streets engaging one another, badgering one another, laughing together, crying together, loving together. Each was placed on trial by life. Each sought a way of escape. But life pursues without end.
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