When Christopher Creed, the class freak and whipping boy, suddenly
disappears without a trace, first his fellow students, then all the
citizens of Steepleton join in to speculate on what could have happened
to him. As fingers begin pointing, the town starts to fall apart and
several lives are changed forever. innovative and intense, The Body of Christopher Creed will grab the reader and hang on until its chilling conclusion.
Torey
Adams is a well-liked high-school student in a respectably historic
town in South New Jersey. Both has parents are successful in their
careers and some see Torey's life as perfect. He's got a beautiful
girlfriend and enjoys comfortable life until he finds out that his
classmate, Chris Creed, is missing. There's no body yet, but the town
can't help but speculate the details. Did he just walk out of his
life? Commit suicide?
Torey's group of friends cling
to the gossip that he was murdered, possibly by someone from their
school. His friends all make jokes, particularly one outsider named Bo
Richardson. None of them can give the disappearance the respect it
deserves. This bothers Torey. He reconnects with Ali, a girl he'd been
better friends with in the past. She seems affected by the
disappearance and confides a lot of Chris's secrets to Torey. As
Chris's next door neighbour she has a great view of the Creed's house
from her bedroom window. She invited Torey over the next night to spy
on the family's weird behaviour. He agrees, even though he knows it'll
look bad if it gets back to his girlfriend. But Ali assures him that
her boyfriend is coming over as well, which will help dispel rumours.
Besides, he feels a distance between him and his friends and thinks some
time with Ali might help with his discomfort at how life has been
unfolding.
'What bugged [him] was how quick people
were to think that [Chris] had been murdered... It was easier to point
the finger at somebody else... Something inside him felt totally ready
to be completely nice to the rejects - people like Creed...'
At
Ali's he's able to shed the pressure from his friends and indulge in
the mystery of the disappearance. They watch the Creed family from her
bedroom window. Apparently, Mrs. Creed has a habit of meticulously
searching Chris's room every night. Ali speculates that she's looking
for Chris's diary. She thinks Mrs. Creed thinks it has some secret as
to her son's whereabouts.
Soon, Ali's boyfriend shows
up and Torey is surprised to see it's none other than Bo Richardson.
Torey is surprised to find the older boy kinder and more compassionate
than anyone had ever given him credit for. Sill, Bo remains true to his
reputation as trouble-maker by suggesting they break into the Creed's
house to steal the diary. Torey concocts a plan based on a movie he saw
once. He'll phone the Creed residence from a pay phone demanding money
in exchange for information regarding their son. They think this will
lure the parents out of the home giving Bo the opportunity to break into
the house. It worked so well in the movie, but has a disastrous
chain-effect resulting in Torey, Bo and Ali getting hauled into the
police station for questioning. Bo is determined to take the
consequences but Torey feels guilty. His only relief is the fact that
his mom is a lawyer who finds herself almost obligated to help Bo out of
the worst of it.
For all the trouble it caused their
plan was successful. Bo succeeded in procuring the diary from the
house. Ali and Torey become obsessed with the words inside. Through
the scribbled handwriting they discover that Chris had a girlfriend in
another town; a girl he worked with. A girl named Isabella Karzdan.
They read further to find out Chris saw a psychic with this girl. Torey
looks the girl up in the phone book and Ali and him take a trip to
visit her. She's nothing like Chris described in his diary. This tells
Ali and Torey that Chris wrote down a highly imagined life. Isabella
reveals that the psychic is her aunt and asks if they'd like to meet
her. Torey is skeptical, but when she tells him that he'll find the
body in the woods under some boulders he can't help but be curious. He
knows the exact spot Isabella's aunt is describing. Desperate to get to
the bottom of the mystery he proceeds to check the area out. It's then
that he makes a most gruesome discovery.
The Body of Christopher Creed
reveals the complex world of both high-school and adulthood and twists
in a mystery so compelling you'll want to devour the story just to find
the answer to what, exactly, happened to Christopher Creed?
Click here to purchase The Body of Christopher Creed.
Tuesday, 25 August 2015
Wednesday, 12 August 2015
Title: Things Fall Apart Author: Chinua Achebe
Things Fall Apart tells two intertwining stories, both centering
on Okonkwo, a "strong man" of an Ibo village in Nigeria. The first, a
powerful fable of the immemorial conflict between the individual and
society, traces Okonkwo's fall from grace with the tribal world. The
second, as modern as the first is ancient, concerns the clash of
cultures and the destruction of Okonkwo's world with the arrival of
aggressive European missionaries.
These perfectly harmonized twin dramas are informed by an awareness capable of encompassing at once the life of nature, human history and the mysterious compulsion of the soul.
Okonkwo 'was tall and huge and his bushy eyebrows and wide nose gave him a very severe look... he had no patience with unsuccessful men.'
Unoka, his father, was an unsuccessful man and growing up under his father's failures pushed Okonkwo to become an independently wealthy and powerful man in his community. He worked hard and expected his family to follow his lead. Through his strength of will and determination he quickly became someone respected by the clan. He was given a boy from another tribe who ended up quite dear to him, not that he could ever admit it.
One day, another older, more respected man came to visit.
"Do not bear a hand in his death," the man warned.
Okonkwo is surprised and quickly learns that for some reason, after three years, the Oracle, a woman of vision and prophesy, has decided the boy should die. The old man advises Okonkwo to stay home that day. Unable to show even any weakness Okonkwo feels it's his duty to go to the killing ceremony of the boy who calls him 'father.' Once there, the boy runs to him in fear, for comfort, but Okonkwo struck him down with his very own machete.
"What you have done will not please the Earth," the old man warned when he learns of Okonkwo's actions.
"The Earth cannot punish me for obeying it's messenger," Okonkwo argued, speaking of the Oracle.
But the death of the boy weighed heavily on his mind and his heart.
It isn't long before he learned that his second wife's only child was dying. It was suspected by many that the girl was an 'ogbanje, one of the wicked children who, when they died, entered their mother's wombs to be born again.' His second wife bore ten children, all but one had died before their third birthday. Finally, Okonkwo called on a medicine man skilled with the ogbanje spirits. But the girl remained sickly, albeit, alive. The had even found her token that tied the evil spirit to it's malicious cycle and destroyed it. Still, the child fell ill. Okonkwo felt he had no choice but to interfere with the mother as she cared for her sick child. He told her how to make a potion and together they prayed it would work. He would never say it out loud, but the girl was secretly his favourite child.
It wasn't long before the priestess to the Oracle came, half possessed with prophesy calling for the sick girl. Okonkwo and his wife strive to come up with excuses to why she can't come out. Shrieking with madness the priestess insists and the girl is handed over. His wife tried to follow the woman who has her child, terrified as to why she'd been summoned. The family had already lost one child to her whims, they couldn't bear one more. She follows the priestess all night only to find the woman placing the sleeping child back in her bed at early morning light.
Pleased that his daughter was safe but still mourning the loss of the boy, Okonkwo was not able to continue living his peaceful, prosperous life in the village for much longer. During a burial ceremony for an elder Okonkwo accidentally kills the dead man's youngest son. It is forbidden to kill a fellow clansman and the offence results in the expulsion of Okonkwo and his family for seven years. They must seek refuge in his mother's land among his mother's people. They are warmly welcomed by his mother's people, but the exile has devastated the family. They live their lives as best they can while Okonkwo strives to recreate his former glory. He advises his daughters not to marry into this more unfamiliar tribe.
'With two beautiful, grown up daughters his return [home] would attract considerable attention.'
It's during this time that the missionaries came to the community proclaiming in the name of the one true God and his son, Jesu Kristi. Okonkwo scoff's at the message, convinced the white missionary is mad.
'But there was one young lad who had been captivated... Okonkwo's first son... [though] he dared not go too near the missionaries for fear of his father.'
But the lure of the new religion was too strong and the boy chose to forsake his family for the new way.
Okonkwo was eventually able to move home, though he finds his tribe changed. The new religion had flourished and had attracted many different faces to the church.
His world, irrevocably changed, left Okonkwo in a state of disbelief. People were being indoctrinated into thinking their ways, the ways of their fathers, were bad, evil, something to disown. Okonkwo tries to rally the tribe against the missionaries, but not everyone was as bothered by the changes as he was. His son chose to go to a new training school for teachers. This news makes Okonkwo furious.
'Okonkwo was deeply grieved... He mourned for the clan, which he saw breaking up and falling apart.'
The change that descended on him proved too much for him to bear as he clings, desperately, to the old, familiar ways.
Things Fall Apart is a rare glimpse into tribal African life; it's rules and complexities laid glaringly bare. It shows you a world both before and after the reign of Empires showing what it was like to have your world changed overnight by forces directed at you from across strange seas.
Click here to purchase Things Fall Apart.
These perfectly harmonized twin dramas are informed by an awareness capable of encompassing at once the life of nature, human history and the mysterious compulsion of the soul.
Okonkwo 'was tall and huge and his bushy eyebrows and wide nose gave him a very severe look... he had no patience with unsuccessful men.'
Unoka, his father, was an unsuccessful man and growing up under his father's failures pushed Okonkwo to become an independently wealthy and powerful man in his community. He worked hard and expected his family to follow his lead. Through his strength of will and determination he quickly became someone respected by the clan. He was given a boy from another tribe who ended up quite dear to him, not that he could ever admit it.
One day, another older, more respected man came to visit.
"Do not bear a hand in his death," the man warned.
Okonkwo is surprised and quickly learns that for some reason, after three years, the Oracle, a woman of vision and prophesy, has decided the boy should die. The old man advises Okonkwo to stay home that day. Unable to show even any weakness Okonkwo feels it's his duty to go to the killing ceremony of the boy who calls him 'father.' Once there, the boy runs to him in fear, for comfort, but Okonkwo struck him down with his very own machete.
"What you have done will not please the Earth," the old man warned when he learns of Okonkwo's actions.
"The Earth cannot punish me for obeying it's messenger," Okonkwo argued, speaking of the Oracle.
But the death of the boy weighed heavily on his mind and his heart.
It isn't long before he learned that his second wife's only child was dying. It was suspected by many that the girl was an 'ogbanje, one of the wicked children who, when they died, entered their mother's wombs to be born again.' His second wife bore ten children, all but one had died before their third birthday. Finally, Okonkwo called on a medicine man skilled with the ogbanje spirits. But the girl remained sickly, albeit, alive. The had even found her token that tied the evil spirit to it's malicious cycle and destroyed it. Still, the child fell ill. Okonkwo felt he had no choice but to interfere with the mother as she cared for her sick child. He told her how to make a potion and together they prayed it would work. He would never say it out loud, but the girl was secretly his favourite child.
It wasn't long before the priestess to the Oracle came, half possessed with prophesy calling for the sick girl. Okonkwo and his wife strive to come up with excuses to why she can't come out. Shrieking with madness the priestess insists and the girl is handed over. His wife tried to follow the woman who has her child, terrified as to why she'd been summoned. The family had already lost one child to her whims, they couldn't bear one more. She follows the priestess all night only to find the woman placing the sleeping child back in her bed at early morning light.
Pleased that his daughter was safe but still mourning the loss of the boy, Okonkwo was not able to continue living his peaceful, prosperous life in the village for much longer. During a burial ceremony for an elder Okonkwo accidentally kills the dead man's youngest son. It is forbidden to kill a fellow clansman and the offence results in the expulsion of Okonkwo and his family for seven years. They must seek refuge in his mother's land among his mother's people. They are warmly welcomed by his mother's people, but the exile has devastated the family. They live their lives as best they can while Okonkwo strives to recreate his former glory. He advises his daughters not to marry into this more unfamiliar tribe.
'With two beautiful, grown up daughters his return [home] would attract considerable attention.'
It's during this time that the missionaries came to the community proclaiming in the name of the one true God and his son, Jesu Kristi. Okonkwo scoff's at the message, convinced the white missionary is mad.
'But there was one young lad who had been captivated... Okonkwo's first son... [though] he dared not go too near the missionaries for fear of his father.'
But the lure of the new religion was too strong and the boy chose to forsake his family for the new way.
Okonkwo was eventually able to move home, though he finds his tribe changed. The new religion had flourished and had attracted many different faces to the church.
His world, irrevocably changed, left Okonkwo in a state of disbelief. People were being indoctrinated into thinking their ways, the ways of their fathers, were bad, evil, something to disown. Okonkwo tries to rally the tribe against the missionaries, but not everyone was as bothered by the changes as he was. His son chose to go to a new training school for teachers. This news makes Okonkwo furious.
'Okonkwo was deeply grieved... He mourned for the clan, which he saw breaking up and falling apart.'
The change that descended on him proved too much for him to bear as he clings, desperately, to the old, familiar ways.
Things Fall Apart is a rare glimpse into tribal African life; it's rules and complexities laid glaringly bare. It shows you a world both before and after the reign of Empires showing what it was like to have your world changed overnight by forces directed at you from across strange seas.
Click here to purchase Things Fall Apart.
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