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Wrightales Fairytales for Grownups (who have never quite grown up) The first nine stories are finally available as a collection. Though not handbound, they are beautifully presented in single volume, either in hardcover of softcover, through Xlibris.com. This collection can also be downloaded as a podcast at podiobooks.com beginning sometime in July 2007. You can listen to me reading all nine stories over the space of 16 episodes. The podcast is free (though donations are encouraged!)
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Picking Up the Pieces is
the newest Wrightale. It is a story about hubris and innocence, nature and artifice. Horace, a
lazy, ex-apprentice wizard, uses a bit of pilfered magic to steal--quite literally--the best
parts of the best stories from the best storytellers in the land in the hope of winning a
great prize. He does not know or care what wreckage he leaves in his wake. It takes
a young girl and an old man to set things right again.
Read the beginning of Picking Up the Pieces...
[Add to Cart]
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Tears of the Sun is
a Solstice story. A winter tale for braving the darkest part of the year, it is a personal
exploration of the celebrations of light and community with which we mark the dead of winter.
Share this story of overcoming the dark with friends.
Read the beginning of Tears of the Sun...
[Add to Cart]
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Slightly West of Nowhere,
the seventh Wrightale, is a story about making choices and
about not making them. When Gileal cannot decide which road to take, her brother
warns her, "Choices must be made as they appear, or quicker than a sneeze
they are gone." Choices are that much harder to make when roads disappear
and shadowy Nowhere men hunt you. But isn't no choice better than the
wrong choice? Read the beginning of Slightly West of Nowhere...
[Add to Cart]
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The first Wrightale came about as a birthday gift for a friend turning forty.
The Heart of the Matter
(© 1996 Lisa Wright)
is the story of a dream deferred: a story that might sound familiar to anyone
who has had to set their dream aside while they dealt with raising a family or
simply trying to make a living. My friend was not the only one turning forty,
and the story went beyond one person's story to speak to many. The first edition
of twenty copies was followed by a second edition of fifty and then a third edition
of one hundred. Other smaller editions followed as each year brought another tale to
join the first. The book is 37 pages long, the equivalent of a 16 or 17 page
full-sized standard book. Read the beginning of The Heart of the Matter...
[Add to Cart]
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Wild Goose Chase
(© 1996 Lisa Wright) came next. It is a story of the danger of following the "straight
and narrow" too closely. Young Tib catches hold of her wild goose hoping to fly all the
way to the Gates of Hope only to tumble off before she reaches her goal. Now she must
figure out how to avoid the vines of sorrow, the pit of envy and all the other dangers
along the way. It is 49 pages long, the equivalent of a standard 25 page book.Read the beginning of Wild Goose Chase ...
[Add to Cart]
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The Accidental Sage
(© 1998 Lisa Wright) is the story of a man who has no talent
for happiness. He has traveled the world, but only discovers the secret in the strangest of
circumstances. The Accidental Sage
is a fable for people in search of The Secret of Happiness.
The shortest of the Wrightales at 26 pages,
it is the equivalent of a standard 12 page book. Read the
opening of The Accidental Sage...
[Add to Cart]
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In Farther Than The Eye Can See
(© 1999 Lisa Wright) Nemonee is quite literally torn in
two between finishing her apprenticeship to a silversmith and following her soul
across the broad river to the exotic sun drenched country on the other side.
Read the
opening of Farther Than The Eye Can See...
[Add to Cart]
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Between the Darkness and the Dawn
(© 2000 Lisa Wright) is the
story of a fledgling storyteller. It explores the power of stories for good and ill as well as the challenge of
sticking with your dream once its lost its original thrill. The longest of the Wrightales to date, it is 113
pages (the equivalent of a standard 50 page book.) Read the
beginning of Between the Darkness and the Dawn...
[Add to Cart] |
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In the Forest of the Wild Boar
(© 2002 Lisa Wright) peers into the heart of a community. An act of generosity
leads to loss and a village is sunk into a joyless existence until an unlikely heroine
discovers the key that will unlock that joy once more. This story is 42 pages long
(the equivalent of a full-sized 35 page book.)
Read the
opening of In the Forest of the Wild Boar...
[Add to Cart] |
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