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ehextra.com - Ehextra


ehextra.com - Ehextra

Posted: 26 Feb 2020 10:01 PM PST

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Looking for a summer camp? Here’s a list of opportunities for kids while school is out - The State

Posted: 27 Feb 2020 04:31 AM PST

Poe's 'The Tell-Tale Heart' Comes To Palm Beach In Opera Form - WLRN

Posted: 28 Jan 2020 12:00 AM PST

Edgar Allen Poe's famous short story "The Tell-Tale Heart" follows an unreliable narrator's account of murdering his roommate, and then his distress over being able to hear the murdered man's heart beating loudly, even after he's dead.  The dramatic, suspenseful story has spawned numerous adaptations for film, TV, radio,theater and ballet.

Now, composer Gregg Kallor is bringing his operatic version to the Society of the Four Arts in Palm Beach for a Wednesday evening show.

WLRN's Madeline Fox spoke to Kallor about why he chose to use Poe's story, and how his version subverts some assumptions about the original text.

This conversation has been edited for clarity and length.

WLRN: What was your first experience with "The Tell-Tale Heart?" Can you tell me about when you first read it?

GREGG KALLOR:  I think the first time I read "The Tell-Tale Heart" was maybe in middle school, maybe in high school. I don't remember much about it, except that the story itself struck me. I had very little to do with it for a long time. I mean, it kind of hovers on the edge of your consciousness, comes up occasionally.

I didn't want to get into a full opera. I wasn't quite ready for that. So I thought, well, I love reading short stories. What about setting one [to music]? I had this vision of sitting around a campfire or someone holding a flashlight under their chin and and scaring the crap out of people. And I thought, well, yeah, I want to do that. And so what is a good ghost story? And Poe immediately came to mind.

The story, "The Tell-Tale Heart," follows a main character who's horrified by his roommate's eye and ends up killing him and stashing him beneath the floorboards. And then he's tormented by the sound of the man's heart beating. You said you categorize it as as a ghost story, as this sort of campfire story. Tell me a little bit more about that.

I always think of ghost stories as the ones that are chilling in a certain way, the ones that pull you in as a listener and create this very vivid world that scares you because you've envisioned yourself a part of it. I don't think of ghost stories as necessarily having to do with the supernatural. It's more of a visceral experience.

One of the adaptational choices that you made in this staging was to make the main character a woman.

It's interesting. There's nothing in the text that specifies gender. Most people, myself included, always assumed that the narrator is a man. But really, there's no reason to think that. So I thought, well, I don't know, what if we try giving this to a woman?

It's kind of like in high school, you're sitting in English class and the professor brings in a frog for you to dissect or vice versa, you're in science class and they put a poem in front of you. Context. It just it makes you focus, or it makes me focus, that much more intently. So I thought something about this kind of subverted expectations a little bit, but it's still an entirely familiar tale — just maybe with a slightly different twist.

And in this opera the performers are just you, and the cellist, and then singer Jennifer Johnson Cano.

Yes. This is for voice, cello and piano. I wrote the piece with the idea that the cello would be another character in the story, so not background music in any way. It's kind of the aural embodiment of the narrator's thoughts. At times it's sort of a poltergeist on the edge of her consciousness. At other times, it's reflecting and magnifying her anxiety. And then the last component is the piano, which kind of provides the overall sound world that's in her head.

So basically what we're trying to do with the music is take what's in her head and manifest it in sound so that the audience is kind of enveloped in her world, and experiences what she experiences as she experiences it, rather than a retelling. It's more of a 'I am grabbing you by the throat and pulling you along with me for this crazy ride where I descend into the depths of insanity.'

Talk to me a little bit about what people will see when they see the performance here in Palm Beach.

So, for this performance, it's going to be less of a staged experience. It's going to be more of a concert setting. So, in a way, a little closer to my original intention, which was just a bunch of people sitting around a campfire and somebody happens to stick a flashlight underneath their chin. We're not going to use a costume, we're not gonna have any lighting changes. There will be no sets, no scenery. So this will really be carried on the strength of the performance.

If you go

Tickets for the performance, at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Jan. 29, are available on the Society of the Four Arts website. The music from the show can be purchased or streamed via links on Kallor's website.

My love affair with short stories - Deccan Herald

Posted: 08 Jan 2020 12:00 AM PST

If a novel is an elaborate meal of several courses, a short story is delectable street food— sharp, tangy, spicy and delicious. It may not be a full meal to satiate your hunger, but it certainly tingles your taste buds and leaves you asking for more. It's a difference between a delicious meal in a five-star hotel and yummy pani poori or egg rolls eaten on the roadside. Each has its place and each is enjoyable in its own way.

My love affair with short stories began when I was in high school. We had a library period every week when we would have to sit in the library and read for forty minutes. Forty minutes is hardly enough time to read a novel, so I would reach for a book of short stories. There were huge anthologies of stories, some of them entitled— 'Stories for Girls,' 'Stories for Boys' and many more. I never understood why this distinction between boys and girls was made. All the stories in all the books were good and I enjoyed all of them immensely.

My method for enjoying a book of short stories is to first scan the table of contents and first pick the shortest stories. After they are read, I turn to the slightly longer ones. In a short story, there is no room for character development of the protagonist or any long conversation between the characters. There aren't lengthy descriptions and or preludes. Everything is limited to the storyline. The reader's attention has to be grabbed and held by the author so that his story rivets the reader for a few short pages in which the story unfolds. The story could be a romance, a thriller, crime fiction or even a children's tale, every kind of story lends itself to this genre.

Over the years, I have amassed many volumes of short story collections. (Forty-eight as of now) Some of the books have the same stories but it doesn't matter to me. I have a bad memory so I don't mind reading the same story multiple times. In a book exhibition, I was amazed to find short stories written by authors famous for writing huge tomes like Charles Dickens and Leo Tolstoy. Short stories with a twist at the end are the best kind. O Henry was famous for such stories. The Gift of the Magi and After Twenty Years come to mind immediately when you think of twist endings. Novelists like Agatha Christie and PG Wodehouse have also written several gems in this genre. In today's fast-paced world, the short story is ideal bedtime reading material.

13 of the Best Short Stories Online - Oprah Mag

Posted: 17 Jul 2019 12:00 AM PDT

If a novel is a marriage, then a short story is a love affair. So said Lorrie Moore, one of the undisputed masters of the form. There's an inherent intensity to really good short fiction, an every-word-matters fervor urging readers to a revelatory finish. Below are thirteen of our favorite short stories, from irrefutable classics by Jamaica Kincaid and Flannery O'Connor to newer additions to the pantheon—spanning crime, magical realism, and snackable tales you can devour on the beach. An added bonus? You can read these all online for free.

1 "In the Cemetery Where Al Jolson Is Buried" by Amy Hempel

Read this story—about a woman whose friend lays dying in a hospital—and weep, both because it's utterly devastating (yet somehow laugh-out-loud funny?) and also because it was the first story Hempel, the Matron Saint of the short form, ever wrote.

Read Now

2 "The Husband Stitch" by Carmen Maria Machado

A la Angela Carter, Machado rips up the fabric of fairy tales to expose the horror within. In this terrifying tale from the Leonard Prize-winning collection Her Body and Other Parties, a newly-married wife holds on to the only secret she feels she has left—a mystery her increasingly insidious husband is desperate to unravel.

Read Now

3 "Birdsong" by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

A story of infidelity in the New Yorker might be as commonplace as an MTA delay, but here, the fearless author of Americanah renders an illicit relationship between a Nigerian woman and her married lover (and the remorse the former may or may not feel years later) with heart-shattering nuance.

Read Now

4 "The Semplica-Girl Diaries" by George Saunders

The modern maestro of absurdism brings a working class family's economic anxiety into sharp relief before and after they win the scratch-off lottery. With the prize money, the dad, tired of feeling "dopey and inadequate," buys his young daughter a Semplica Girl—a human turned lawn ornament—in a disastrous attempt to keep up with the Joneses.

Read Now

5 "Lady Tigers" by Nick White

The stories in White's debut collection Sweet and Low are as lush and haunting as the place in which many of them are set: the Mississippi Delta. In this highlight from the book, White probes the seeming peace that often occurs in the eye of the storm, centering on a teen boy who becomes the manager of his high school's softball team—after his father, the coach, is caught having a relationship with one of the players.

Read Now

6 "Girl" by Jamaica Kincaid

It's tempting to call this classic story "short and sweet" but that latter descriptor might not be totally accurate. "Girl" unfurls as a list of dos and don'ts (mostly don'ts) for how to be a respectable lady, and at just one page, it packs a punch.

Read Now

7 "The Paper Menagerie" by Ken Liu

In 2012, Liu's incredible tale became the first work of fiction to win the Hugo, Nebula, and World Fantasy Awards. The story centers on the son of a white father and Chinese mother, the latter of whom knows no English and, despite being a source of comfort and (literal) magic, becomes an increasing irritation to a boy desperate to fit in. If this story doesn't break your heart in a million pieces, then it might be time to get the old ticker checked out.

Read Now

8 "Island" by Alexia Arthurs

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A woman wrestling with her sexuality returns to her Jamaican homeland to attend her friend's straight wedding. Arthurs writes beautifully about how belonging to two different places often means belonging nowhere. Her collection How To Love a Jamaican was one our favorite books from last year, and "Island" is one of many, many standouts.

Read Now

9 "The Frog King" by Garth Greenwell

Every line in a Garth Greenwell story brims with devastating beauty, his sumptuous sentences filled with an almost operatic longing. In "The Frog King," the nameless narrator, an American teaching in Bulgaria, vacations to Italy with his Portuguese boyfriend. "I wanted to challenge myself to write happiness," Greenwell told the New Yorker. The story, like the holiday the characters take in it, offers a needed respite.

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10 "A Good Man Is Hard to Find" by Flannery O'Connor

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Classics are classics for a reason. In this iconic southern crime chiller, a grandmother unwittingly shepherds her family towards doom, crossing paths with an escaped serial killer. 

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11 "Cosmopolitan" by Akhil Sharma

An Indian man whose wife and daughter have left him falls for his neighbor, a white woman who confounds him so much he studies issues of Cosmopolitan in search of tips and tricks for how to woo her. Sharma pulls no punches and wastes no words; his exacting prose is the perfect tragicomic vessel to probe the sociocultural and sexual mores of contemporary Indian life.

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12 "What It Means When a Man Falls From the Sky" by Lesley Nneka Arimah

Call it magical realism, call it realistic fantasy—call it whatever you want, but Arimah's playfully subversive style is wholly her own. Read this fable of mathematicians who make their living "calculating and subtracting emotions, drawing them from living bodies like poison from a wound," and then immediately go listen to Levar Burton perform it on his podcast, Levar Burton Reads.

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13 "The Knowers" by Helen Phillips

What if you could learn the date of your death way before it happens? Would you? And what would you do with that information and your remaining days among the living? That's the hook of "The Knowers," a story so wondrous and affecting that you should read it even if you only have a few minutes left to live.

Read Now

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