Tag Archives: Drama
“Bitter Orange” – by Marshall Moore
What would you do if you found out that you could be invisible to the people around you, but only when performing morally questionable acts? Would you exercise this ability? Bitter Orange attempts to explore this rather fascinating situation through … Continue reading
“Head of Words” – by Chris Ward
With thirteen in a single bedroom apartment things can get a little cozy, especially when each resident has a decidedly singular character. But this suits Dan just fine – that is, until a crisis leaves him bewildered and alone. Head … Continue reading
“The Pretty Gentleman” – by Max Fincher
He sits in his cell, scribbling notes and awaiting his fate. How did he get here? Is his real crime that he loved the wrong person? Initially written as a memoir while waiting to be executed, George Rowlands’ is less … Continue reading
“Thugs Like Us” – by John Carnell
A storm is coming and Jimmy feels it. As his birthday draws near and his brother returns from the Parachute Regiment, Jimmy faces a future that could break him. And then there’s the sea – always the sea. Thugs Like … Continue reading
“Cansville” – by Alan Flurry
As the Cansville’s newest creative director, can Toby write the play that will pump life back into the old theatre and its town? Or is the Cansville merely an opportunity for Toby to break away from the icons of his … Continue reading
“Under the Looking Glass” – by Alisa Tangredi
There is a crime. Of that we are certain. But we are not so sure of the place and time. Follow Maura through the looking glass and down the rabbit hole as we try to piece together reality from fantasy. … Continue reading
“Storm Damage” – by John A. A. Logan
An anthology of ten fables which cover ground from the fictitious Scottish space program to the adventures of an orange pig in the company of wolves, Storm Damage seems to hint at questions which it asks the reader to elaborate on … Continue reading
“Clay’s Way” – by Blair Mastbaum
Growing up on Hawaii’s Oahu island, Sam uses his appearance as a rebellion against who he’s expected to be. But he has deeper differences irreconcilable with the community in which he lives. And then there’s Clay… Clay’s Way is a … Continue reading
“Pegasus Falling” – by William E. Thomas
For Captain Stanley Adam Malcolm Parker, salvation from the torment of incarceration in a concentration camp was not provided by the allied soldiers who liberated him. It was provided by the Jewess who shared his despair, who clung to him as … Continue reading
“The Survival of Thomas Ford” – by John A. A. Logan
After a motoring accident leaves his wife dead, Thomas Ford is left in hospital with only fragmented memories of how he survived and how his wife died, of a car and its strange bird-like driver forcing him off the road … Continue reading