Down By the Creek - Ripples and Reflections is a collection of stories and poems for readers of all ages and walks of life. Author Paul Stansbury invites you to share in the amusing exploits of some young boys as they learn life lessons along the banks of their creek. These are the Ripples, adventures in fishing, pranking and romance, influenced by his own experiences growing up in Kentucky along Fern Creek. Accompanying each story, are the Reflections, Paul's poems, in which he looks back on the meanings of his own experiences down by the creek.
Down By the Creek Bank is exactly what the title suggests...a musical experience into the world of children, in their setting, sung BY children FOR children. The musical can be used as is, or your children can write their own script. Songs include: Ain't Gonna Let The Mountains Praise The Lord * Being Me * Down By The Creek Bank * Fill In The Blanks * Germs * He Plants Me Like A Seed * I Am Adopted * Is There Anything I Can Do For You * Love Is * Multiply * Puzzles * Senses.
Late summer 1941. Louisianas piney woods are engulfed by a tidal wave of soldiers engaged in the largest army maneuvers ever undertaken on American soil. For many of these young men, as well as the isolated Southern communities, life will never be the same. Although no one knows it, our nation will be at war in three months. Elizabeth Reed is a young Louisiana schoolteacher who dislikes soldiers. Harry Miller is a Wisconsin soldier who hates Louisiana. It only makes sense that they should meet and fall in love. Their story begins with a bulletan empty cartridge tossed from a truckload of soldiers. The note inside it will change the destinies of these two young people. In the midst of large-scale battles between the red and blue armies, Harry and Elizabeth are each fighting their own war with dark secrets from their pasts. They have nothing in common except mutual desires to escape these pasts. In spite of clashing at every turn, they run right into each others arms as they jointly learn that the hardest person to forgive is yourself. Within this clash of cultures lies the core message of A Spent Bullet. Rural Louisiana is never the same, and neither are the soldiers who learn about Louisiana mud, mosquitoes, and misery mixed with memorable Southern hospitality. More than a love story, A Spent Bullet recreates a memorable but largely forgotten time in Louisiana and our nations history. Told in the warm and touching style loved by readers of his previous eight books, Curt Iles weaves a story of love, history, and redemption.
In 1990 David Kaufman decided to explore Peachtree Creek from its headwaters to its confluence with the Chattahoochee River. For thirteen years he paddled the creek, photographed it, and researched its history as the Atlanta area's major watershed. The result is Peachtree Creek, a compelling mix of urban travelogue, local history, and call for conservation. Historical images and Kaufman's evocative color photographs help capture the creek's many faces, past and present. Most Atlantans only glimpse Peachtree Creek briefly, as they pass over it on their daily commute, if at all. Looking down on the creek from Piedmont or Peachtree Roads, few contemplate how it courses through the city, where it originates and flows to. Fewer still-many fewer-would ever consider paddling down it, with its pollution and flash floods. Through his expeditions down Peachtree Creek and its five tributaries--North Fork, South Fork, Clear Creek, Nancy Creek, and Tanyard Creek--Kaufman takes readers through such places as Piedmont and Chastain Parks, which, aside from the polluted water, are beautiful, even bucolic. Other stretches of creek, like those draining Midtown and Atlantic Station, are channeled into massive culverts and choked with discarded waste from the city. One day, floating past the Bobby Jones Golf Course, he surprises a golfer searching for his stray ball along the creek bank; another he spends talking to a homeless man living under a bridge near Buckhead. Kaufman reveals fascinating aspects of Atlanta by examining how Peachtree Creek shaped and was shaped by the history of the area. Street names like Moore's Mill Road and Howell Mill Road take on new meaning. He explains the dynamics of water run off that cause the creek to go from a trickle to a torrent in a matter of hours. Kaufman asks how a waterway that was once people's source of water, power, and livelihood became, at its worst, an open sewer and flooding hazard. Portraying some of our worst mishandling of the environment, Kaufman suggests ways to a more sustainable stewardship of Peachtree Creek.
Laura and her family move to Minnesota where they live in a dugout until a new house is built and face misfortunes caused by flood, blizzard, and grasshoppers.
This groundbreaking book is a sequel to Celebrate Life that illustrated how to Realize, Renew, Release your trapped energy. In Living Right Side UP in an UP-Side-Down World, the reader was invited to a deeper plunge into the Great Lake of your lived experience where you feast in present-moment awareness. The third book in this trilogy especially after Sept. 11, 2002 prepares the reader to make a different passage into 21st century's ecological age and in the process to experience homecoming to Earth. The simple proposal to the reader, including the author, is to wake up. To wake-up with wide-eyed wonder! That electrifying wonder activates a stream of energy and insights for loving and cherishing this Earth. May we become in the process fully human and fully alive as an Earth-being. What does it mean to become an Earth-being? It means that we reenter the Great Conversation of the human and the natural world. In embracing the Great Conversation, we once again bring inside us the voices of the natural world like the wind in the trees, the wonder of moonlight, the sighing of prairie grasses to sing inside us in resounding chorus. Now we have the beginning of a different human. Out of such a conversion experience over more than twenty years this book has been written. In that spirit of Earth-wonder and Great Work may you see new possibilities in the bonding of human-being and Earth-being for living on this garden planet with a soaring sense of mutual well-being.
Bursting forth from the Louisiana Piney Woods is Deep Roots, a collection of short stories from author Curt Iles. In the warm and touching style loved by readers of his previous books, Iles weaves stories of the people, places, and history of rural Louisiana. PLEASE CHANGE TO: In the book that solidified his reputation as a storyteller, Curt Iles released his sixth book, The Wayfaring Stranger. Based on family stories of his great-great-great grandparents, Iles fashions the story of Joseph Moore, an Irish stowaway, searching for freedom and peace. Moore ventures to Louisiana's "No Man's Land" during the turbulent 1850's. While making a new life, he meets Eliza Clark, a young woman with deep roots in the piney woods. The Wayfaring Stranger is the story of how their lives intersect in the pioneer wilderness of mid-nineteenth century Louisiana. It is a riveting tale that will grip readers from its opening scene to dramatic ending.