Emerson thesis -- Writing, literature, and publishing
Found in 2106 Collections and/or Records:
An artist's temple, 2013
This nonfiction thesis manuscript captures the decade-long journey of a young performing artist thwarted by the effects of post-traumatic stress disorder. -- abstract.
An excerpt from 'The Parting Glass', 2012
My thesis is the first sixteen chapters of my novel, 'The Parting Glass.' Narrated by Stephen, his teacher, Mr. Campbell, and his girlfriend, Ada Saffarstein, the novel is about Stephen Carroll, a bright but wild lad from The Bronx, that is sent to Fairwi
An outside curiosity, 2009
An Outside Curiosity is a novel charting the demise of a small community on Eilean Fior, a fictional island west of Scotland. It focuses particularly on George and Maureen McCloud, owners of the island's only guesthouse, and their three children: Barry, F
An Overlooked Publishing Industry Coming to Light: West African Publishing, 2020
An Unmothered Daughter, 2020
Ana, in the attic : a fable, 2005
A timeless macabre fairytale of the northern wilderness...Nine chapters of text are followed by a hypothetical book proposal for Eos, an imprint of Harper-Collins, which specialize in fantasy/science fiction. -- abstract.
Analyzing prewriting in the freshman composition class, 1996
Ana's stories = Cuentos de Ana, 1998
Anatomy of a jackass, 2001
Anchorage, 2013
And deliver us from Paynesville, 1996
Angsana grove, 2009
Centered about a family business -- an artisanal soy sauce factory that is that last of its kind in Singapore, this novel explores one young women's search for independence amidst the swirling desires of family and loved ones. -- abstract.
Angst : manuscript to book, 1999
Animal Bones and other stories, 2019
Anna and the mean babysitter, 1994
Another place, 1999
Anthony of the desert, 1998
Antique capital of the world, 2001
Any one of us, 2009
As a Harvard law student who passionately opposed the death penalty, I took a job defending murderers who had sexually assaulted their child-aged victims before killing them. I believed that if I truly opposed the death penalty I should know whom I was tr