ISBN-13: 9781498262330 / Angielski / Twarda / 2012 / 154 str.
ISBN-13: 9781498262330 / Angielski / Twarda / 2012 / 154 str.
Description: Parktails is an adventure that takes place in the aftermath of a great forest fire. Once the fire is extinguished, the animals of Geyser District, led by Zornova and Gondzor, are forced to confront numerous difficulties. Many of these displaced animals become despondent as a result of the loss of homes, relatives, and friends. As part of their attempts to find answers, they send parties of their representatives to oracles in search of answers and wisdom. While searching they confront a variety of dangers and obstacles, which they must overcome for the sake of their community. Unfortunately, the answers are not always clear, so they work together to interpret these ambiguous nuggets of wisdom. Endorsements: ""What happens when the Edenic protection of a national park is visited with a destructive fire of biblical proportions? In his first novel, Doug Campbell gives us a window on the lives of those most overturned in the calamity, the animals . . . They] must make . . . decisions about their future, always painfully aware of what humans are doing . . . Conflict erupts as] prophetic omens drive the animals on a quest to find sacred space and safety."" --Jay Beaman author of Pentecostal Pacifism About the Contributor(s): Douglas G. Campbell is Professor of Visual Art at George Fox University in Newberg, Oregon. He is the author of Seeing: When Art and Faith Intersect (2002).
Description:Parktails is an adventure that takes place in the aftermath of a great forest fire. Once the fire is extinguished, the animals of Geyser District, led by Zornova and Gondzor, are forced to confront numerous difficulties. Many of these displaced animals become despondent as a result of the loss of homes, relatives, and friends. As part of their attempts to find answers, they send parties of their representatives to oracles in search of answers and wisdom. While searching they confront a variety of dangers and obstacles, which they must overcome for the sake of their community. Unfortunately, the answers are not always clear, so they work together to interpret these ambiguous nuggets of wisdom.Endorsements:""What happens when the Edenic protection of a national park is visited with a destructive fire of biblical proportions? In his first novel, Doug Campbell gives us a window on the lives of those most overturned in the calamity, the animals . . . [They] must make . . . decisions about their future, always painfully aware of what humans are doing . . . [Conflict erupts as] prophetic omens drive the animals on a quest to find sacred space and safety.""--Jay Beamanauthor of Pentecostal PacifismAbout the Contributor(s):Douglas G. Campbell is Professor of Visual Art at George Fox University in Newberg, Oregon. He is the author of Seeing: When Art and Faith Intersect (2002).