Displaying items by tag: Final Draft

One of the more curious aspects of being “in remission” occurred to me when I was working on my book, Final Draft. Back in September when I started writing what I still envision to be an adventure story about a boy who followed a white rabbit down a hole and who then grew up to be a curious fellow indeed, I knew I needed something to preface that old rabbit story. I needed something that combined my lifelong interest in reading and in crafting narratives with a final “summing up,” by which I mean some useful conclusions about what those narratives and living by the logic of them have meant in my life and what I have learned along the way.

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Latest Blog Posts

  • Speechless in Phoenix
    Speechless in Phoenix “Sometimes it takes darkness and the sweet confinement of your aloneness to learn anything or anyone that does not bring you alive is too small for you.” David Whyte, “Sweet Darkness”   Twice this week I have been rendered alive and speechless by dear friends who also happen to be valued colleagues. The first episode of speechlessness occurred when Amira de la Garza shared with me the progress she, Bob Krizek, and Nick Trujillo have…
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  • A Good Week of Answered Prayers and Continuing Wonder
    A Good Week of Answered Prayers and Continuing Wonder “Which are the magic moments in ordinary time? All of them, for those who can see.” --Tim Dlugos, “Ordinary Time” This has been a week of good news, visits, gifts, a graduation, and much happiness. We are truly blessed and very grateful each and every day. And blessed also for the wonder of another starry, starry night. The good news was reported on Facebook right after we received it from Dr. Robin on Wednesday afternoon…
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  • Things We Take For Granted ... Until
    Things We Take For Granted ... Until The first sign of trouble with our air conditioning was on Monday and it was an obvious sign: adjusting the thermostat down to 78 degrees didn’t produce the usual start-up whir of a electric motor nor the reassuring whip-whip-whip of a fan. Adjusting it down further – to 75, then to 70, then all the way down to 60 met with the same aural absence and a gradual admission that, in fact, we had a…
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Featured Books

  • Counter-Narrative

    Counter-Narrative

    “A rhetorical tour de force that offers academics and the public alike a persuasive counterstatement against far right political views... to reclaim the original intention of U.S. democracy—‘to promote the common good.’”

    - Lawrence R. Frey, Calgaard Professor of Communication and Social Justice, Trinity University

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