In the first chapter you find Peter Sebastian, a lonely widower, on a plane to Italy to identify the supposed corpse of his son, Luke. As he travels, Peter reads Luke's left-behind journal in hopes of figuring out clues to his mysterious death. What he does find, is rather different, as his son had a secret relationship with the young and beautiful Saskia Einreihner, a German exchange student who captured Luke's heart. As Peter enters Luke's world, he soon figures out that he isn't finding out how Luke died, but more or less finally realizing how his son lived.
"My life story so far..." Every day is an opportunity to live your dreams, and create new ones. Record your dreams, and your path towards them, in this journal. With 148 pages, half lined, half blank, there is plenty of space for you two write and draw to your heart's desire. Plus, every time you look at the journal and read the quote you'll be motivated to bigger and better things.
Luann Budd offers to help you get started journaling, and she introduces you to the power of writing as a spiritual discipline through helpful tips and examples from her own journals.
Designed to accompany, awaken, and inspire the journal-writing traveller. Includes more than fifty lively, experimental exercises to keep you interested in journaling and channel you experience into fulfilling projects that also preserve memories.
Autobiography has seen enormous expansions and challenges over the past decades. One of these expansions has been in comics, and it is an expansion that pushes back against any postmodern notion of the death of the author/subject, while also demanding new approaches from critics. Drawing from Life: Memory and Subjectivity in Comic Art is a collection of essays about autobiography, semi-autobiography, fictionalized autobiography, memory, and self-narration in sequential art, or comics. Contributors come from a range of academic backgrounds including English, American studies, comparative literature, gender studies, art history, and cultural studies. The book engages with well-known figures such as Art Spiegelman, Marjane Satrapi, and Alison Bechdel; with cult-status figures such as Martin Vaughn-James; and with lesser-known works by artists such as Frédéric Boilet. Negotiations between artist/writer/body and drawn/written/text raise questions of how comics construct identity, and are read and perceived, requiring a critical turn towards theorizing the comics' viewer. At stake in comic memoir and semi-autobiography is embodiment. Remembering a scene with the intent of rendering it in sequential art requires nonlinear thinking and engagement with physicality. Who was in the room and where? What was worn? Who spoke first? What images dominated the encounter? Did anybody smile? Man or mouse? Unhinged from the summary paragraph, the comics artist must confront the fact of the flesh, or the corporeal world, and they do so with fascinating results.
Life is a journey. Plot yours well. Are you increasingly frustrated with how your life is going? Do you feel overwhelmed by its constant demands? Are you tired of the weight of life crushing in on you and desperately need some relief? If this is you, I invite you to stop, take a deep breath, and try something new. Welcome to the Life Journey Journal--a journal specifically designed to give you that much needed daily dose of fresh air. Within these pages, you'll find a simple, flexible, and powerful system that will help you navigate life by cutting through overwhelm and finding a moment of creative calm no matter what life storm you're currently facing. Each page is structured with a large lined section for writing and a smaller section for extra notes, drawing, or coloring. The writing section of each page includes a date and title area and a lined gray area that can be used for bullet points, numbers, or checkmarks when you need to make lists. Full-color photographs and inspirational quotes are sprinkled throughout the book to help encourage you each day. In addition to its innovative design, this journal includes specific guiding prompts to help you write what is most meaningful to you in your current stage of life. Included are guides for: prayer, productivity, grief, gratefulness, health/fitness, travel, and even story-writing. All of this is organized into a book not just designed to get you writing, but also drawing, coloring, and creating your way to a better, more purposeful life. However you choose to use this journal, treat it as your daily dose of creative clarity and you'll find that the mad dash of life will sweep you off your chosen path far less often.
Write your autobiography in just one question a day! Everybody has a story, and this book enables even reluctant journal writers to record an autobiography. By answering just one thought-provoking question for each day of the year, it's easy to write your life story! For anybody who has ever given up writing after being intimidated when facing a blank page, this book makes it easy to take a snapshot of your history and inner life in just a few minutes each day. This specially-sized package features a printed flexi-bound cover, four-color endpapers, quality paper, and a bookmark ribbon.
An introspective fill-in-the-blank that helps readers reflect on their past, evaluate the present, and dream for the future. My Life Map helps people at any stage of life create a visual road map of both their past and their future in major life areas such as family, work, play, friends, and education. Charting the past highlights patterns you may not have noticed before. Seeing the years ahead encourages you to set goals and shape a future with intention and purpose. This interactive self-help journal includes innovative mapping and chapters on Creating Your Maps (warm-up exercises for envisioning your future and tips on how to fill out your maps); Sample Journeys (completed maps of fictitious people at different stages of life); My Life Maps (blank whole-life, ten-year, and subject maps to fill out); Putting Your Maps into Practice (tips and tools for establishing next steps and annual checkups); and Reflections (blank pages to record discoveries, challenges, or promises).
Borrowing the best examples from her own journals, and the works of others, Hinchman leads the reader from simple jottings and scratched likenesses to fully illuminated gems of philosophy, and shows how a lasting record of experience and a road map for self-discovery can be created. 116 illustrations, 16 in color. Gift-boxed.
John Steinbeck wrote The Grapes of Wrath during an astonishing burst of activity between June and October of 1938. Throughout the time he was creating his greatest work, Steinbeck faithfully kept a journal revealing his arduous journey toward its completion. The journal, like the novel it chronicles, tells a tale of dramatic proportions—of dogged determination and inspiration, yet also of paranoia, self-doubt, and obstacles. It records in intimate detail the conception and genesis of The Grapes of Wrath and its huge though controversial success. It is a unique and penetrating portrait of an emblematic American writer creating an essential American masterpiece.