File:Cementville800x1200.jpg
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Summary
editDescriptionCementville800x1200.jpg |
English: Book jacket cover for the novel Cementville. Author: Paulette Livers. Publisher: Counterpoint Press, Berkeley CA. Cover Designer: Michael Kellner. Photographer: Pieter Van Damme. |
Date | |
Source | Own work |
Author | Paulettelivers |
About the Author: Paulette Livers is the author of the novel Cementville (Counterpoint), winner of Elle magazine’s Lettres Readers Prize, finalist for the Center for Fiction’s Flaherty-Dunnan First Novel Prize, and shortlisted for Chicago Writers Association Book of the Year. Among recognitions for her work are fellowships from Artcroft Foundation, Aspen Writers Foundation, Ox-Bow Artist Residence, Vermont Studio Center, and Virginia Center for the Creative Arts; and awards and honorable mentions from Center for the American West, Denver Women’s Press Club, Hunger Mountain, the Meyerson Prize for Fiction, Red Hen Press, Writers@Work, and others. She earned the BA from University of Louisville and the MFA from the University of Colorado. Livers teaches at Story Studio Chicago and is the Creative Director at Mighty Sword Studio, where she helps writers and publishers make beautiful books. About the Novel: In late spring of 1969, a picturesque southern town is turned inside out by the deaths of seven young National Guardsmen in a single Vietcong attack. The return of the bodies sets off something inside the town itself—a sense of violence, a political reality, a gnawing unease with the future—pushing the families of Cementville into alienation and grief. The town appears blind to the PTSD of Harlan O’Brien, POW and war hero, even as his horrific experiences bend his mind in terrifying ways. Giang Smith, the ‘war bride,’ has fled the violence of Vietnam with her American husband only to encounter echoes of it in her new home. Evelyn Slidell, the wealthy icon and a descendant of Cementville’s founders, is no stranger to what close-mouthed grief can do to a family. And members of the notorious Ferguson clan, led by the violent Levon and his draft-dodging brother Byard, share a secret despair of their own. Through one strange summer Maureen, the adolescent sister of a recently returned GI, attempts to document the changes happening to her town. CEMENTVILLE speaks as a grieving community—already several centuries old—being born again in times of intense change. With the Civil Rights Act only a few years old, a restless citizenry divided over the war, and the Women’s Movement beginning to send tremors through established assumptions about family life, CEMENTVILLE provides a microcosm of a society shedding the old order, a story resonant with echoes of the issues of war and social change still being confronted today. Available wherever books are sold. Please visit www.PauletteLivers.com
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Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
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current | 16:29, 1 June 2016 | 800 × 1,200 (2.08 MB) | Paulettelivers (talk | contribs) | User created page with UploadWizard |
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Width | 1,800 px |
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Height | 2,700 px |
Pixel composition | Separated (Probably CMYK) |
Orientation | Normal |
Number of components | 4 |
Horizontal resolution | 200 dpi |
Vertical resolution | 200 dpi |
Software used | Adobe Photoshop CS5 Macintosh |
File change date and time | 07:45, 18 February 2016 |
Exif version | 2.21 |
Date and time of digitizing | 11:10, 15 August 2013 |
Color space | Uncalibrated |
Date metadata was last modified | 01:45, 18 February 2016 |
Unique ID of original document | xmp.did:01801174072068119109F4AC0623F1E0 |