Author: | Short Story Press | ISBN: | 9781476010007 |
Publisher: | Short Story Press | Publication: | June 23, 2012 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition | Language: | English |
Author: | Short Story Press |
ISBN: | 9781476010007 |
Publisher: | Short Story Press |
Publication: | June 23, 2012 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition |
Language: | English |
Short Story Press Presents A Winters Morning by Katelynd Jarvis
A Winters Morning takes a close look at a young woman who is dealing with the residual affects of her abusive husband.
• Gives a window into the emotional battle between still being in love with her husband and hating him.
• The story is told in a series of flashbacks. Some throwing the reader directly into the moments, others brief, past tense recollections.
• Told in first person, it allows the reader a window into the protagonists direct thoughts and emotions, allowing them to get lost in the moment with her, instead of being on the outside looking in.
• The story is told in a fluid time line in the span of a morning on, what would have been, her fourth wedding anniversary.
• Limiting the characters to only the protagonist and her husband, in the past tense.
The story is not broken down into chapters, rather through flashbacks, allowing for a fluid time line, but keeping the reader engaged without the abrupt ending or beginning of a chapter. Throwing the reader into the constant emotional thralls with the protagonist.
Short Story Press Presents A Winters Morning by Katelynd Jarvis
A Winters Morning takes a close look at a young woman who is dealing with the residual affects of her abusive husband.
• Gives a window into the emotional battle between still being in love with her husband and hating him.
• The story is told in a series of flashbacks. Some throwing the reader directly into the moments, others brief, past tense recollections.
• Told in first person, it allows the reader a window into the protagonists direct thoughts and emotions, allowing them to get lost in the moment with her, instead of being on the outside looking in.
• The story is told in a fluid time line in the span of a morning on, what would have been, her fourth wedding anniversary.
• Limiting the characters to only the protagonist and her husband, in the past tense.
The story is not broken down into chapters, rather through flashbacks, allowing for a fluid time line, but keeping the reader engaged without the abrupt ending or beginning of a chapter. Throwing the reader into the constant emotional thralls with the protagonist.