The Glass Character
Friday, March 16, 2012

This life is bittersweet

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  Now all of the planes have landed The soldiers are in their beds   Smoke rises from their clothing And sweet dreams ...
2 comments:
Wednesday, March 14, 2012

You'll never get off the playground (short fiction)

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She knew it was ridiculous, she knew she was obsolete, and most of all she knew she was alone. There were days when everything just s...
11 comments:
Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Lovely Erica

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Sometimes, when you're having a sucky rotten day, you just have to try to focus on what is good in your life. I have four...
2 comments:
Monday, March 12, 2012

Ever knitted a dinosaur?

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I knitted these guys for my dino-loving grandson Ryan for his 6th birthday. NOT life-sized! http://margaretgunnng.blogspo...

The flight attendant from hell, part 2

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The more things change, the worse they get, it seems. Yesterday I wrote quite a long post about that incident involving an American ...
2 comments:
Sunday, March 11, 2012

The flight attendant from hell, part 1

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Yesterday I heard a disturbing news story about a flight attendant on an American Airlines aircraft (still on the ground, fortunately) w...
4 comments:
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Margaret Gunning
Port Coquitlam, British Columbia, Canada
Welcome to Margaret Gunning's blog: a tribute to the strangeness of the ordinary. Ms.Gunning is the author of The Glass Character (Thistledown Press), her paean/tribute to the brilliant silent screen comic Harold Lloyd. Researching and writing this novel celebrating Harold's legacy and legend was by far the most compelling (and fun!) experience in her long and varied writer's life. The novel is available on Amazon and Kindle, Thistledown Press, and other major book sites. Her previous novels, Better than Life (NeWestPress) and Mallory (Turnstone Press) explore her lifelong fascination with family secrets, alienation, and the surprising joys of the ordinary. She has also written hundreds of book reviews (Montreal Gazette, Vancouver Sun, Toronto Globe and Mail) and newspaper columns for small-town papers across the country. Her philosophy: "Everything that happens is happening for the first time."
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