The more you’re convinced you’ve uncovered the truth, the more likely it is you’ve missed something important.
With over five decades of reporting, journalist/author Rod Raglin, has turned to fiction and poetry to address those important things today’s truth dismisses. In Finding Meaning, Making Sense, the works evoke empathy allowing the reader to abandon society’s current polarization mindset and consider different perspectives
With the immediacy of short fiction and the introspection of poetry, the anthology provides insight and reflection on relationships and contemporary issues. Themes include:
Contemporary Issues: Politics, protest, lifestyles, social and personal issues; seven poems and five stories that address contemporary issues with a new perspective, including, BROTHERS. A personal tragedy just before a crucial vote, makes an aspiring politician question his decision–and his ambition.
The Chronicles of Arni – an Old Man in Modern Times Food insecurity, corporate greed, loss of influence, ageism, declining health, loss, grief – five poems and four stories about aging in challenging times, including, BETTER THE DEATH YOU CHOOSE. Is death a better choice than a long and frightening decline in the care of strangers?
The Environment Three poems and four stories about hope and horror and action and alternatives, including, THE LEAST OF LIGHT. Materialism, stress, greed, dead trees and turkeys – that’s Christmas. What about an alternative?
Horror/Fantasy/Speculative Seven stories iabout hikes into hell, an experiment gone very bad, and relationships that are worse than death–and longer, including, WORSE THAN DEATH. Some things are worse than death. A lot worse.
Relationships Rewarding, devastating, always complicated, stories and poems about relationships – the crux of life. Nine poems and five stories including, THE PARTY YOU WISH TO REACH. Does a dysfunctional childhood, mean a dysfunctional life? Can those survival skills learned as a kid be used to advantage later?
Thoughtful, honest, and unforgettable, this collection invites the reader to see that even when life makes little sense, meaning may be found in considering a different perspective other than your own.
Rod Raglin is a journalist, photographer and keen environmentalist living on the west coast of Canada. He’s the author of thirteen self-published novels, a collection of short stories and two plays. To read excerpts of his work visit his Amazon author page at https://www.amazon.com/-/e/B003DS6LEU His short fiction and poetry frequently appear in online publications. For links to short stories and poems accepted and published individually or in an anthology most of which are free to read, visit https://revuecommunitynews.com/rod-raglin-author He blogs about ‘Writing – the experience’ at http://rodraglin.wordpress.com/ Follow him on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/rodraglin and on Facebook at: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100013287676486
What’s better than sex?
What’s so great about two people groping and gasping, in the dark, culminated in a premature ejaculation and followed by embarrassing awkwardness?
Consider seduction; the planning, preparation, cajoling and persuading – the strategy that leads up to the moment when you know without a doubt you’re going to be chosen to share that most intimate of human experiences.
SEDUCTION is one of the 25 short stories in Finding Meaning, Making Sense, An Anthology of Short Stories and Poems, 2022 – 2025, that address contemporary issues – with depth and balance. Pre-order it now at https://www.amazon.com/-/e/B003DS6LEU
Book Excerpt
Finding Meaning, Making Sense - An Anthology of Short Stories & Poetry - 2022-2025
Like most nineteen-year-old men, I had a perpetual hard-on, and little wonder.
With the campus populated by beautiful young women with contoured legs stretching into a micro patch of skirt, second-skin jeans creeping deep inside crevices and firm breasts cleaving out of low-cut tops – punctuated by button-nipples…how could I not?
Temptation was everywhere. What wasn’t revealed, and that wasn’t much, could be imagined.
But unlike my two best friends, Trev and Hunter, who were campus Lotharios, I was still a virgin.
It wasn’t that I was shy, unfriendly, disgustingly unattractive, or didn’t desperately want to score, I was just awkward, out of sync. I also lacked athletic prowess and rich parents to enhance the appeal like they did.
However, being in the sphere of influence of the two most popular guys in college, I hoped I’d get lucky, if even only as a conciliation prize.
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