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"The darkness isn't as bad / as people think." So ends the first poem in Emma Catherine Hoff's numinous debut, An Archeology of the Future-before proceeding calmly, curiously into the dark. People weep in the streets. The snow closes its eyes. Birds scream, a question begs the world for its answer, everything is "frozen yet moving." Hoff's world, like ours, is ending, and yet this is not a tragedy: "there was peace for Earth / with no one there." Walking the tightrope between humor and despair, rationality and absurdism, the sublime and the material, Hoff's poems are elegant, wise, ageless. These are poems written against eternity.
Jaz the Barra goes on an adventure to find the source of the music, meeting Australian wildlife along the way.Fun, Educational & Re-readable!
A not so sure portrayal of a teenagers dreams, struggles, and plans for the future, with a few funny stories and tidbits included.This is a book of humor, and everything else thats involved with teenage life. part one to a continuing series
"Emily Dickinson's beloved poem "'Hope' is the thing with feathers" takes flight in this beautifully illustrated adaptation, reminding us that hope is always there when we need it, never asking for anything in return."--
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