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This anthology includes selected works published by Philadelphia Stories Magazine over the past 5 years.
A collection of the best short fiction, poetry, and essays published by Philadelphia Stories between 2004 and 2014. This volume, published in celebration of Philadelphia Stories' tenth anniversary, includes work by Philadelphia-area writers as well as winners of the magazine's national contests - the Marguerite McGlinn Prize for Fiction and the Sandy Crimmins National Prize for Poetry.
Besides containing abridged excerpts from the most important plays and musicals, the Theater yearbook also gives information about the New York season, on and off Broadway, about the season throughout the U.S., and gives facts and figures about the American theater.
Another Breath is a collection of short fiction, creative nonfiction, and poetry written by Rosemont College MFA faculty and alumni.
Besides containing abridged excerpts from the most important plays and musicals, the Theater yearbook also gives information about the New York season, on and off Broadway, about the season throughout the U.S., and gives facts and figures about the American theater.
Editor: winter 1939-autumn 1941 J. C. Ransom.
Make History with Your Students From bestselling author Paul Bambrick-Santoyo and Art Worrell, Uncommon Schools’ Director of History Instruction, comes Make History, an inspiring book on how educators can take history instruction to the next level. History teachers face unique challenges in introducing history lessons to students, and they are under increasing pressure to get it “right” in an age of social progress and social divisiveness. This book is a guide to bring the past to life while teaching students how to make sense of history. Use the ideas and techniques to turn your history students into writers, readers, and thinkers who are ready not only to succeed in college, but also...
In The Architect of Elsewhere, Donna Wolf-Palacio examines strange and familiar liminal spaces and states. Poems build from the elemental to the mythical: "...we watch gold skies / disappear in the landscape." For everything we can touch and hold in these poems, something slips out of our grip, out of focus. These poems are boats that drift from shoreline to shoreline over a sometimes dangerous river. They are chalk marks on a driveway. As each veil is peeled away, another continues to distort reality: "Deep in this history, / we blend sorrow." Through the poems of The Architect of Elsewhere, Donna Wolf-Palacio asks question after question that can only be answered by elemental, animal wisdo...