![]() ![]() It’s a poem with music that is performed on stage.Ī: I am a practicing Attorney. Q: What attracted you to audition for The Spoon River Project?Ī: Working with Becca Parker and the uniqueness of the play. I appeared in It’s a Wonderful Life and played several characters. Q: Is this your first show at Live Arts, and what other shows have you done with us?Ī: This is my second show. Paul Kamm has graciously answered a few of our probing questions for your enjoyment: ![]() His Role in the Spoon River Project is that of Actor 1, where he will play the roles of Washington McNeeley, George Gray, and Richard Boone. ![]() He has performed in Chestnut Bluff and Arsenic and Old Lace at Canton Theatre, in addition to performing in last years Christmas Show. Kamm has trained at the Alliance Theatre, taking Acting and Film classes. In addition to his illustrious day job, Mr. Kamm is a delightful person and a joy to work with both on the stage and off. Paul Kamm back to our stage for this production of The Spoon River Project. Live Arts Theatre is delighted to welcome Mr. Meet the cast of The Spoon River Project- Paul Kamm ![]()
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![]() ![]() ![]() The pure rugged Epilogue: The new frontierĪccess-restricted-item true Addeddate 21:14:19 Associated-names Stewart, Dave, colorist Fletcher, Jared K., letterer Boxid IA40231811 Camera USB PTP Class Camera Collection_set printdisabled External-identifier Originally published in single magazine form in DC: the new frontier, 1-3 and 4-6ġ. DC : the new frontier takes readers on an epic journey from the end of the Golden Age of heroes to the beginnings of the legendary Justice League of America Stalwarts such as Batman, Superman and Wonder Woman continued to fight for truth and justice but, as the world hurtled toward an uncertain future, it would take a new breed of hero to define the American Way. In the 1950s, Cold War paranoia outlawed the Mystery Men of the Golden Age. ![]() ![]() ![]() Arcta climbs back up onto the mountain and helps Tom up, He then waves goodbye and walks back up into the mountain Tom then receives the Eagle Feather that can help him. Luckily Arcta grabs hold of the mountain lower down and Tom scrambles up to the enchanted knot and undoes it sending the blindfold plunging down into the abyss. Read Beast Quest: Arcta the mountain Giant novel written by the author zeblackarne on Webnovel, This serial novel genre is Fantasy stories, covering action. ![]() ![]() Tom sneaks up on Arcta and tries to undo the blindfold but alerts Arcta in the process, Arcta struggles to shake Tom off but falls over the edge of the mountain pludging into the abyss. Tom and Elenna first meet Arcta in the Place of the Eagles where their battle takes place. The two Beasts rolled and grappled on the ground, with Torgor trying to crush and gore Tagus. Arcta the Mountain Giant is the third beast Tom and Elenna face in Beast Quest, he is found in the Northern Mountains of Avantia.Īrcta has a large, bulky body which was covered in fur, two muscley arms and legs and a large, round head with a monsterous face on it and one single eye in the middle of his forehead.Īrcta has enhanced strength which he uses to protect the Northern Mountains by pushing large rocks away to prevent landslides. ![]() ![]() ![]() In fear and confusion the man barrels out of the lab and disappears. In the blink of an eye Emily disappears and a rough-looking man appears in her place. When the collider starts up it hits its projected energy target but then inexplicably continues powering much higher. ![]() High on his priorities is his new relationship with physicist Emily Loughty, the collider's beautiful and accomplished Scottish research director. Scarred by his wartime experiences, he's been fighting his demons and putting his life back in order. John Camp heads up security at a world's largest super-collider tunneled around London. A cross between DANTE'S INFERNO and GAME OF THRONES, DOWN is part historical thriller and part fantasy-adventure, a thought-provoking, page-turning, epic saga that explores the consequences of evil and transports readers to a world unlike any they have ever experienced. DOWN - Pinhole is the first book of an explosive new trilogy by international bestselling author, Glenn Cooper. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() The Hideaway Inn by Philip William Stover "An irresistible queer romance." - Publishers Weekly on Better Than PeopleĬarina Adores is home to highly romantic contemporary love stories where LGBTQ+ characters find their happily-ever-afters.Ī new Carina Adores title is available each month: Is this what it feels like to have a home-and someone to share it with? ![]() And the more time he spends with Charlie, the more he can see himself falling asleep in Charlie's arms.and waking up in them. ![]() But the longer he stays in Garnet Run, the more he can see himself belonging there. He isn't used to people wanting to put things back together-not the crumbling house he just inherited, not his future and certainly not him. Rye Janssen has spent his life breaking things. When the man comes in for the fifth time in a week, Charlie can't resist intervening. When a stranger with epic tattoos and a glare to match starts coming into Matheson's Hardware, buying things seemingly at random and lugging them off in a car so beat-up Charlie feels bad for it, his instinct is to help. He took care of the cat he found in the woods.so now he has a cat. He took care of his father's hardware store, building it into something known several towns over. When his parents died two days before his eighteenth birthday, he took care of his younger brother, even though that meant putting his own dreams on hold. A man who's been moving his whole life finally finds a reason to stay put.Ĭharlie Matheson has spent his life taking care of things. ![]() ![]() Bush 41's policies put the Taliban in charge of Afghanistan, Clinton kept them there and Bush 43 was distracted by a VP and a Condi who were uninformed and uninterested. Mistakes were made, by Bush 41, Clinton and Bush 43. ![]() This is an amazing book, filled with knowledge, rich storytelling, and thoughtfulness. When the wrap up finally comes it is stunning and insightful. The narration is crisp and exciting without being overly-dramatized. The writing avoids analysis until the end, letting you examine events as they unfold with amazing clarity and detail. You will watch how the outcast younger son of a prominent family, named Osama bin Laden, sets up an empire in the ruined countryside. You will learn about the Washington political climate under different presidencies and see how they cripple any potential to cure Afghanistan of its extremism. You will meet the directors of the CIA and see how their personalities influence the agency. ![]() It tells the story of the CIA's involvement in Afghanistan from the Soviet Invasion to the terror attacks in 2001. Ghost Wars may prove to be the best book I read in 2013. ![]() ![]() ![]() NOTICE: Watch out for some light spoilers in the following review, I’ve tried to conceal them as well as possible while still getting my point across. So, off I went, reading The Uglies Trilogy by Scott Westerfeld, during my downtime at work. Fast forward about 10 years (oh my gosh), I thought that I ought to give the book another try – remembering that it was quite the sensation “back in the day”. (Completely flipped from my preferences today) However, I did remember trying to read this series and not really getting into it at all, I remember not relating to the characters in any way. But, I was always terrible at reading assigned books, and at the time, I loved contemporary fiction – not fantasy or dystopia. I actually had the first book, Uglies, as assigned reading in 8th grade (my teacher tried to assign popular contemporary books, Ex. So, I’m kinda late to the party on this series. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() I forced myself to keep listening, thinking he'd bring it up near the end. A family was murdered before the book even began and the hero knew who was responsible, but wasn't naming names. The characters were never really developed, so I never had any interest in them. The next 11 hours were a repetitive account of the newly-weds trying to get used to each other and trying to change the many parts about each other they didn't like. The rest of the story had the unimpressive hero/heroine meeting right away, falling for each other and marrying immediately. The prologue described a mighty warrior who, right before a battle, saw a vision of a lovely female with a hawk and two wolf-like dogs. The short prologue was the only interesting part of this book as the rest of the story did not follow suit. ![]() ![]() ![]() Her son, Garp, is less beloved, but no less polarizing.įrom the tragicomic tone of its first sentence to its mordantly funny last line-"we are all terminal cases"- The World According to Garp maintains a breakneck pace. "Garp's mother, Jenny Fields, was arrested in Boston in 1942 for wounding a man in a movie theater." Jenny is an unmarried nurse she becomes a single mom and a feminist leader, beloved but polarizing. The opening sentence of John Irving's breakout novel, The World According to Garp, signals the start of sexual violence, which becomes increasingly political. He is a Populist, determined to keep alive the Dickensian tradition that revels in colorful set pieces.and teaches moral lessons."- The New York Times A special 40th anniversary edition of the bestselling coming-of-age classic novel by John Irving, with a new introduction by the author. ![]() ![]() ![]() The principal primary sources are Wilson’s diary and his letters, which provide an incomplete and, at times, unreliable picture: Wilson was, as Caesar notes, a dreamer, a chancer, and a man adept at varnishing the truth. ![]() The citation for the Military Cross he won stated: “It was largely owing to his pluck and determination in holding this post that the enemy attack was held up.” It was Wilson’s first day on the frontline.Ĭaesar is a journalist foremost, rather than a historian, yet the book has been meticulously researched. Isolated, in advance of the British frontline, raked by German machine guns, Wilson continued to fire on the enemy. “Almost every man not taken prisoner was a casualty,” Caesar writes. As a second lieutenant in 1/5th West Yorkshire Regiment (Prince of Wales’s Own), Wilson witnessed the destruction of his battalion at Wytschaete, on 25 April 1918. ![]() Wilson’s short, irregular life pivoted, as with so many of his generation, on a single day in Flanders. How the son of a Bradford mill owner got to the Rongbuk monastery forms the central narrative of this carefully crafted, riveting tale. ![]() |