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Spring/Summer 1991
/ I was too shy to stop." The other voice, an Adult's, is audible in words like ... reminiscence its own first words: "I said to myself.... " This second voice controls the ... poem's overt narrative, telling the riddle of its own nativity, but it is these two voices together and ...
world. In its claim to offer something more than fiction, and in the desire that overwhelms the narrator ... author is "not responsible" for the opinions expressed within. This seems at first only ... a part of the novel's pervasive structure of mystification, which offers its narrative not as ...
Fall 1980
is no parallel. True genre fiction finds overt models in reality. The western, crime, sports, air ... readers he had, he founded the Science Fiction League. In editorials and with offers of membership cards ... and badges, he encouraged readers to get together, by mail or prefer­ ably in person, to further the ...
adult might. Let me sum up. The fictional imagination remains the most open-ended linguistic activity, ... of expression, began to find out where he fits into productive and social relations of the world ... stay in his room and write, write, write; that his "time will come." If ...
Spring/Summer 1991
of voices, characters, vantages: child and adult, "knowing" observer and ... imagination finds necessary the presence of the figure of a child "for whose sake" the ... dreaming child of its own imagining. The adult's convic­ tion of the ...
writers. He teaches fiction writing and Asian American literature at Coe College. This interview has been ... a text. In the first installment of your Catapult column on Asian American literature, you note: “anger ... Salesses’s third novel, Disappear Doppelgänger Disappear. Matt Kim, the novel’s narrator, disappoints nearly ...
represent a teen's first taste of adulthood. Pawn to Queen's Seventh / Young Adulthood ... a three-person tango and even­ tually had Alice flipping out of their arms, asking them ALICE. Do you think ... age we are fascinated by the unknown world of the grown­ up party. My daughters spend hours having tea ...
books, and discovered other points of view besides the first person. Choosing a point of view is a matter ... the first person-really write in the first person, making them­ selves characters on the page. In this ... a swashbuckling first person. It was published, I'm sorry to say. On the other hand, it disappeared with­ ...
(so far as I hear) with much personal necessity. Like his book, Stop Time, Conroy's ... quite predictably normal. His pianism, like his literature, feeds on the past (a narrow past) more than ... you'd think for one his age-an age, however, more advanced than it looks. For he's not twenty ...
Our family consists of two children, Bill, age nine, and Cherry, age twelve; two adults, my par­ ents; ... and one young college person caught in the no man's land between, me. I slipped easily into ... Or to state it more clearly, the children's world and the adults' world. Somewhere ...

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