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Pages filled with thoughts and feelings about the world and the human journey through existence. The attempt to grasp life with the few words we are given.
'There was an infantry of letters that had the strength of a revolution' The Upper East Side of Manhattan needed a girl like Ophelia. The approaching writer, on the other hand, absolute perfection. For her success, promised by her charming lecturer, she is willing to subject parallels, melancholic dark memories from her past, as well as controversial aquaintances and acts which will never again make her the person she once was. As 'Fragile Rebellion', she opposes her own youth and puts everything at risk - even if that meant loosing people, feeling eternal regret or even sacrificing oneself for the accomplishment.
Pollution ruins the river which flows from mountain to the sea.
My son was born in May 2024, and so was I. I am still being born. You might see this as an autobiography, but it is much rather me having found the courage to be blunt and write about my first months of motherhood as it was, pain, tears (both pronunciations), doubt, too much. And then growth, beauty and strength. Not the angelic figure, much rather the bloody fighter. The minute I became a mum in the eyes of the world, I saw it plain as day. The indisputable myth of the perfect mother is still going strong, isn't it? So, to hell with it. My reason for writing each of the stories is candid and unvarnished honesty. Only that could dispel the image of THE mother that is still so damaging, so dangerous. And imaginary. My stories are written spoken word poetry. Not a contradiction at all. Every line completes the whole and stands on its own, as individual as you are, as connected as all of us. You give it meaning when it resounds in your mind, as it becomes voice again. Your voice.
What happens to love when life ends? Is death, so humble and silent, the very end of love, too? Wherever life goes, death follows. Sometimes it's literal, but sometimes it's just a figure of speech. Grief, change, loss, and fear, all different faces of death, can also be a consequence of love. An expression of it. If you have been in love, even unrequited; if you have lost someone dear to you; if you had to leave your home for a better future; if you believe there is something else after the last breath... then you know some answers. These stories, where reality and fiction collide, want to prove that love and death travel together, more often than we know.
What makes a person want to take their own life? After Hazel accidentally saves a strange boy named Nick from this unforgivable fate, she asks herself this question more than once. While Nick's life is on the verge of rock bottom, she tries everything to convince him of the meaning of life again, and somehow she manages to get through to him, to show him that the world offers him more than constant darkness and disappointment. When everything between them seems close to perfect, a sudden secret comes up and makes both of them doubt everything that they've gotten themselves into. One misunderstanding follows another and suddenly seems to flood everything Hazel tried to built up trying to save Nick from drowning in the darkness of his past.
Lies Beneath the River delves into the life of Rimbun, who has carefully distanced herself from her troubled past in Borneo by trying to build a new life in Germany. However, when an urgent call beckons her back home to visit her ailing mother, Rimbun finds herself slowly returning to a mysterious cult along the river course. As she grapples to understand her roots and part in it, the journey reveals itself to what lies beneath the surface of Rimbun's world. Through this book, the author tries to explore the true meaning of home and examine the ideas of one's capacity to harbor both pain and healing, secrets and revelation. This book is a framework of a feature-length screenplay because the author believes that film will better communicate the complexity of identity and culture in this story by showing the contrast and connection of characters and locations through visual medium.
1. Life is full of battles. Especially the ones we fight with ourselves. 2. Life is full of lies. The ones others tell us to protect themselves. 3. Metal bars and cold stone aren't the only kind of prison. Young teenage girl Laila, the last Ran'shun, learns this the hard way when she gets kidnapped for her magical powers at the age of seven. Eight years later, she is free again and looking for her best friend, when she meets Angelo, a Dragon Rider. Their meeting could be destiny, but can she trust him? The story of a girl who does not have much reason to trust anyone in her life. And of a boy who could be her salvation or her death.