Under Purple Skies


Book Description

In recent years, Minneapolis has become one of America’s literary powerhouses. With over fifty poems and essays, Under Purple Skies: The Minneapolis Anthology collects some of the most exciting work being done in, or about, Minneapolis and the Twin Cities area, with narrative threads that stretch back not just to Scandinavia, but across the world. Edited by Frank Bures (The Geography of Madness), the writers included here have won, or been shortlisted for, the Newbery Award, the Man Booker Prize, the Pulitzer, the Caldecott Award, the National Book Award, the Minnesota Book Award, and many others.




Under Purple Skies


Book Description

The best writers in Minneapolis share what they love about their city




A Handful of Purple Sky


Book Description

When faced with adversity, human beings can either break, or rise from the ashes. A Handful of Purple Sky is the story of a resilient woman who, despite waking up one morning to the terrible news that she had breast cancer, not only fought her fears and apprehensions, but also the illness, to emerge stronger and more determined in the end. The journey, however, was not an easy one. In the September of 2017, Mridula Bajpai was diagnosed with Stage 2b breast cancer. Before she could comprehend what was unfolding around her, she had to be up and about, getting all kinds of tests done, meeting doctors, trying to understand the challenge life had suddenly thrown her way. In the hustle and bustle that was life, the news of the illness came as a shock. What followed, were months of gruelling cancer treatment. Mridula was left shattered and broken, with the powerful drugs taking a toll on her body – the side effects were many and scary. Mridula believes that the glass of life is always full and never empty. A Handful of Purple Sky traverses the journey called life, when it brings you at a crossroad, and you can only take one quick decision: to fight, fight and fight till you emerge victorious.




Between the Thunder and the Sun


Book Description

Bringing you stories of intrigue, action, love, and adventure from near and far. The further our world and civilisations go from today, the stranger they could become, and the weirder the things we could encounter. From alternate history, through dystopias, miraculous tomorrows, and out to the furthest reaches of mankind’s exploration of space, this collection gathers a diverse selection of Julian’s finest flash into a single volume for your entertainment. This omnibus draws from his 2011-2021 archives of pure flash fiction (pieces containing 25 to 700 words) that are not available online. They're appearing together for the first time, and have all been revised, some extensively, for inclusion in this collection.







A Charm of Finches


Book Description

Doug Palmer was a sceptic when he came to The Finches to work on his Phd thesis but he is soon drawn into the world of a deceased schoolmaster and his pupils. The Finches has existed behind its high walls since the original convent on the site and so much of its dark history of ghosts and murder intrudes upon the present. Just what did happen on the site during the war and why does even time itself seem not to behave as it should? Doug can find no rest until he has sifted myth and illusion from reality and until he has peeled away the last layer of the onion and revealed The Finches Secret.




Dreams in a Nightmare


Book Description

Love can be hard but when expressed through words it is easier to fall in love as well as move on. Having never been able to understand what love is, I fell in love with words, playing in my mind and body they made their way out into the paper.

About the Author:

Senjuti Mazumder, a former student of St. Joseph's High School, Matigara, Siliguri and currently studying in Loreto Day School Bowbazar, Kolkata, following the Humanities curriculum, is a teenager trying to find the meaning of life through her writings. 

She has been keenly interested in exploring literature and you may find her hopping around coffee shops and local book stores on holidays. Her poem and short story was first published in the year 2021 with many other budding writers in two different anthologies namely Remember The Roses and To Save a Mockingbird respectively. When she is not writing or studying, Senjuti spends most of her time reading, painting, dancing, reciting poems, cooking, and catching episodes of her favourite shows. Also as huge fan of soothing wistful music she has her headphones on almost whole day.




Under Any Sky


Book Description

Under Any Sky: Contemporary Readings of George Santayana is a testament to the cross-cultural relevance of the work of one of the leading intellectuals of the twentieth century, George Santayana (1863-1952, birth name Jorge Agustín Nicolás Ruiz de Santayana). A list of geographic origins of the twenty-two contributions contained in this volume indicates the transatlantic cultural diversity of scholarly representation: scholars variously hailing from Canada, Germany, Italy, Spain, Poland, Slovakia, and Switzerland, and from the United States, representing three of its major regions. The authors explore the major plots of Santayana's thinking, including materialistic Platonism in ontology, skepticism in epistemology, rationality in social philosophy, naturalism in aesthetics, piety in materialism, and literary and poetic expression as a means to cosmic understanding. After a preface by Professor John Lachs (also a contributor), and an editorial introduction, the book is divided into three respective thematic parts: I. Ontology and Naturalism; II. Culture, Society, America; and III. Aesthetics, Poetry, and Spirit. Before each thematic section brief introductions of the section papers is provided to accommodate specific scholarly interests. The authors entrust the present volume to readers appreciative of the philosophic catholicity of the subject's work, invoking the book title which is taken from the preface of Santayana's mature system of philosophy, Scepticism and Animal Faith: "In the past or in the future, my language and my borrowed knowledge would have been different, but under whatever sky I had been born, since it is the same sky, I should have had the same philosophy"




Poems


Book Description




This Thing Called Life


Book Description

A warm and surprisingly real-life biography, featuring never-before-seen photos, of one of rock’s greatest talents: Prince. Neal Karlen was the only journalist Prince granted in-depth press interviews to for over a dozen years, from before Purple Rain to when the artist changed his name to an unpronounceable glyph. Karlen interviewed Prince for three Rolling Stone cover stories, wrote “3 Chains o’ Gold,” Prince’s “rock video opera,” as well as the star’s last testament, which may be buried with Prince’s will underneath Prince’s vast and private compound, Paisley Park. According to Prince's former fiancée Susannah Melvoin, Karlen was “the only reporter who made Prince sound like what he really sounded like.” Karlen quit writing about Prince a quarter-century before the mega-star died, but he never quit Prince, and the two remained friends for the last thirty-one years of the superstar’s life. Well before they met as writer and subject, Prince and Karlen knew each other as two of the gang of kids who biked around Minneapolis’s mostly-segregated Northside. (They played basketball at the Dairy Queen next door to Karlen’s grandparents, two blocks from the budding musician.) He asserts that Prince can’t be understood without first understanding ‘70s Minneapolis, and that even Prince’s best friends knew only 15 percent of him: that was all he was willing and able to give, no matter how much he cared for them. Going back to Prince Rogers Nelson's roots, especially his contradictory, often tortured, and sometimes violent relationship with his father, This Thing Called Life profoundly changes what we know about Prince, and explains him as no biography has: a superstar who calls in the middle of the night to talk, who loved The Wire and could quote from every episode of The Office, who frequented libraries and jammed spontaneously for local crowds (and fed everyone pancakes afterward), who was lonely but craved being alone. Readers will drive around Minneapolis with Prince in a convertible, talk about movies and music and life, and watch as he tries not to curse, instead dishing a healthy dose of “mamma jammas.”