Classical
Biomagnification
Aric rode on white horses, in harbors, and in the mountains, in chariots, and in chariots. He wore fine and poor clothing, farmers' hats, and tradesmen's trousers. He is always moving, always hiding. If Others had heard how far he had traveled and why he would have died. They did not. Three months after his departure, he arrived in a ruined city, where no one was allowed to work.
By Sejal shrestha4 years ago in Fiction
After the Earthquake
After the quake, Steven drove to his grandmother's house to check on her. He realized that the damage was serious when he walked in the door. The entrance tiles were filled with vivid memories — the hospital week, his grandfather's deep breathing, the funeral service in the rain. The brilliant light of memories was filled with fragments of broken glass.
By Rajya laxmi4 years ago in Fiction
Comrades !!!
I was remaining solitary at the transport stand going to Colaba. Before the Worli ocean face, the ocean of Bombay was cleaning up, sitting tight for the morning to completely sprout. The ocean pakhi was going all over with the waves, moaning on his chest. On the far-spread ocean, where Matiala was noticeable, a few boats remaining there resembled pictures. All of a sudden the breeze, which was playing with the morning, came in my ear and said, 'The transport going to Colaba is coming sss.'
By Prince Singh4 years ago in Fiction
Sangura's Faith
(Shemira) Many have offered to do this Shemira for you my Amadeus. They say it is not good that I am the Shomeret for my own husband. But who could do this better than I, your wife?! I loved when you introduced me to someone, you'd say " This is my Sangura". I love you Amadeus, and since I don't know when I'll see you again. I will stay and talk to you until the Cheva Kadisha come for your body.
By Qa'id Ali Harris4 years ago in Fiction
THE BATMAN Review
The personality of Batman has been inseparable from film since the time he showed up in Tim Burton's take of the Caped Crusader back in the last part of the 80s. It is not difficult to say that the person will be for all time a staple in cinemas, yet many would contend that no film has genuinely caught what makes the extraordinary so incredible on the comic book boards. As of recently. Burton's interpretation of the person was considerably more silly, Nolan's was more practical and grounded truly stripping endlessly any of the awesome components of the person. Matt Reeves noir spine chiller film feels like it is straight torn from the pages of numerous comic book fans' adored stories. Reeves portrayal of Gotham feels invigorated, and startling in its smelly and grumpy wrongdoing filled roads. It obviously draws motivation from "The Long Halloween" and "A dead zone", two stories that were inexactly utilized even in Nolan's set of three. Some might pick apart how every emphasis of Batman has gotten hazier and more obscure, however the person and the world he possesses should be nearer to what in particular Reeves has created with this film for it to genuinely work.
By Thasleem Ahmed4 years ago in Fiction
Divine Bloodline
“How can you tell the Tree is a girl, Gran?” The shea butter applied to my scalp in neat little rows slid onto my forehead and mixed with beads of sweat as I sat on the front porch between my grandmother’s knees. Every Sunday, we took my braids down and washed my hair. Then Gran braided it right back up again, greasing my scalp as she went. I can’t imagine a Sunday that we didn’t spend together, managing the mane that fell past my waist. It took all day, but the best part was sittin’ on that porch, listening to her tell stories about our family and the land that provided for us over a hundred years. The oldest member of our family is The Tree, who we simply referred to as She or Her. It’s fitting because She isn’t limited to being called one thing, She is everything.
By Sital baniya4 years ago in Fiction
Lilith
I have already talked about “At the Back of the North Wind”, by the Scotsman George MacDonald, written in 1871, which has Death as its protagonist. The Lilith saga, composed around 1895 and declined in the three novels “Beyond the Looking Glass”, “Lilith” and “The House of Regret”, takes up the figure of the female demon associated with the wind. The protagonist of the trilogy is Lilith, from Akkadian Lil-itu, lady of the air, a creature connected to the storm and the cat. In Mesopotamian culture, Lilith was a demon, whom the Jews borrowed during the Babylonian captivity and transformed into Adam’s first wife, disowned for refusing to obey her husband. She has always had negative characteristics, of a nocturnal, witchy, adulterous and lustful feminine. In the nineteenth century, however, with the emancipation of women, she came to represent the strong woman who no longer submits to men, she is re-evaluated by modern neo-pagan cults and assimilated to the Great Mother.
By Patrizia Poli4 years ago in Fiction


