Before Recollection


Book Description

From Before Recollection: TRANSCENDENTAL POSTCARD Ann Lauterbach The outlook such that time is told on waking, Without aid of cock or clock's crow. In fact all the birds are elsewhere, Poised on glossy page or in some fall Migration. Sun up over mountain is precision, Then mist travels, exhaling day. All else, all change, is air, Dew relenting on the blades And mirror rhymes Where water bears resemblance: A strut of hues to pale even Revlon's alchemy and, In the center of its glaze, a cauldron of sky-cast blue.










RECOLLECTION


Book Description

Since he has been back everything has changed. Sci-fi short story.




ReCollection-ReCalling Your Future


Book Description

Aldo is like many boys you may know today: he loves his family, crushes on girls and digs playing the newest video games. The differences are that he has no body, his family is only memories and the games he plays may kill him. Aldo lives where almost everybody lives, in the massive machine called HEAVEn. His Soul uploaded when he was 16; that was over 30 years ago. Now, because humans keep making the same stupid mistakes they always have, he is joining his closest friends in a fight to save themselves, the machine and the entire human race. But they can't do it alone. They don't know who to trust, and are having a hard time even trusting themselves. So, Aldo is reaching back to someone he can trust. You. He is streaming his memories to the past to let you know what is coming - so that you will be ready, when your time comes. You may be mankind's last best hope to survive the future.




Supreme Court


Book Description










Anti-Slavery Recollection Cb


Book Description

First Published in 1971. When, in the spring of 1853, Harriet Beecher Stowe landed in Liverpool at the beginning of her first triumphal tour of the British Isles, one of the first people she met was Sir George Stephen. It was, in its way, a symbolic encounter. Both were second generation abolitionists whose whole lives had been intimately linked with the progress of the anti-slavery causes in their respective countries. This is a collection of seventeen letters Sir Stephen write to Mrs Beecher Stowe.