Author's e-books - Politics. Page - 1
After experiencing a traumatic #metoo experience, congressional aide, Karen Taylor's, first impulse is to seek justice. With the assailant locked up, awaiting trial, Karen regrets her decision. The stigma will follow her, destroy her career, and sully any romantic relationships she attempts to pursue. During an emotional outburst, Karen intimates she wants to put it all behind her and move on with her life, she wishes 'somebody' could make it all go away.
John D. Wightman creates a universe of mirrors in his continuing poetic sequence Coincides Yon Latrine, though not mirrors as reflections so much as translations, with one part of a middle-justified poem responding to one or more other center-justified parts, prey to the same invisible gravity. There is no set procedureβthis is an artist's logbook and follows the caprices of the daysβbut one half usually involves modified translations of writing by Wightmanβs poetic and philosophical
Little Linus is so small that he's barely even visible. He lives on his own in his family's laundry. But he's not entirely alone, the woodlouse Berit knows him as a grandson and even though their political views are different, they get along. But in the neighboring country, the Broom cupboard, evil lurks as the evil king Sylvester isn't treating his people fairly!
After experiencing a traumatic #metoo experience, congressional aide, Karen Taylor's, first impulse is to seek justice. With the assailant locked up, awaiting trial, Karen regrets her decision. The stigma will follow her, destroy her career, and sully any romantic relationships she attempts to pursue. During an emotional outburst, Karen intimates she wants to put it all behind her and move on with her life, she wishes 'somebody' could make it all go away.
John D. Wightman creates a universe of mirrors in his continuing poetic sequence Coincides Yon Latrine, though not mirrors as reflections so much as translations, with one part of a middle-justified poem responding to one or more other center-justified parts, prey to the same invisible gravity. There is no set procedureβthis is an artist's logbook and follows the caprices of the daysβbut one half usually involves modified translations of writing by Wightmanβs poetic and philosophical
Little Linus is so small that he's barely even visible. He lives on his own in his family's laundry. But he's not entirely alone, the woodlouse Berit knows him as a grandson and even though their political views are different, they get along. But in the neighboring country, the Broom cupboard, evil lurks as the evil king Sylvester isn't treating his people fairly!