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When Bailey the dog, scampers off without his owner, he ends up having an out-of-this world adventure
Scruffle only has one eye and is held together by moldy old thread, but he's Ellie's teddy bear and that's that. But when Ellie's mom buys her a new bear, Ellie must try and find some love for him too . . . .
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Playing It Forward is a series of queer plays by E. Robert Dunn. Creating a play comes with challenges. A play engages the senses more than any other mode of writing. Contained herein are five examples of my forays into the creative writing process of dispelling belief.LipSync: Three male friends of varying ages unite to overcome stereotyping, abuse from their male ex-lovers, and economic hardship through regaining their self-concept and power by using - whether they know it or not - the messages and energy of the music they listen too.A Dragged Out Haunting: Five friends discover mirth and mystery on a get-away vacation to the remote island of Bradberry Cay. Unwillingly, they become seaside...
The Mysteries of Light is an original literary meditation on the significance and meaning of photobooks. Written by a photographer and novelist, the book brings a strong new light to the photobook phenomenon. It’s a mix of personal stories and examinations of such great artists as Robert Frank, Daido Moriyama, Saul Leiter, Alec Soth, Masahisa Fukase, and Christer Strömholm, as well as newcomers Daisuke Yokota, Laura El-Tantawy, and Jason Eskenazi. The Mysteries of Light is personal and passionate, fun, lively, informative, inspiring, and will help you understand photobooks—and get you jazzed about them—in a whole new way.
A challenging new theoretical approach to the study of consumption and identity.
Values are inescapable. They pervade and shape our psychology, our agency, and our lives as reflective and self-knowing subjects. This book explores the crucial ways in which values figure within reflection and thereby shape our theoretical and practical lives, against the backdrop of an expressivist moral psychology that is sensitive to the vicissitudes of valuing. Combining a discussion of the role that values play within reflection with a critique of a range of influential contemporary views in moral psychology and the theory of agency, Dunn shows how such views obscure or distort the nature of that role and that there is a ’natural fit’ between an expressivist account of values and t...
A photobook of Robert Dunn's work in July to August 2017