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ATAR Notes Text Guide: Away

ATAR Notes Text Guide: Away
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2019-06
Genre:
ISBN: 9781925945041

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ATAR Notes Text Guide: King Richard III

ATAR Notes Text Guide: King Richard III
Author: Leo Su
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2019-06
Genre: English literature
ISBN: 9781925945157

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The ATAR Notes Text Guides cover everything you need to know for your set texts. Written by some of the best English students in the country, these books do the hard work for you: condensing all of the important details in your text, and providing you with sophisticated analysis you can use in your own essays. This Text Guide contains: - A thorough summary and analysis of the entire text - Insightful dissections of the characters, key themes, and structural features - A comprehensive quote bank - Exemplary sample essays with commentary designed to help you increase your marks - Highlighted vocabulary words to learn and integrate - Valuable advice from a high-scoring former student who shares their tips and tricks for success.


ATAR Notes Text Guide

ATAR Notes Text Guide
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2019-06
Genre:
ISBN: 9781925945027

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Things We Didn't See Coming

Things We Didn't See Coming
Author: Steven Amsterdam
Publisher: Anchor
Total Pages: 209
Release: 2010-02-02
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0307378918

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Michael Williams, in Melbourne’s The Age, wrote of this award-winning, dazzling debut collection, “By turns horrific and beautiful . . . Humanity at its most fractured and desolate . . . Often moving, frequently surprising, even blackly funny . . . Things We Didn’t See Coming is terrific.” This is just one of the many rave reviews that appeared on the Australian publication of these nine connected stories set in a not-too-distant dystopian future in a landscape at once utterly fantastic and disturbingly familiar. Richly imagined, dark, and darkly comic, the stories follow the narrator over three decades as he tries to survive in a world that is becoming increasingly savage as cataclysmic events unfold one after another. In the first story, “What We Know Now”—set in the eve of the millennium, when the world as we know it is still recognizable—we meet the then-nine-year-old narrator fleeing the city with his parents, just ahead of a Y2K breakdown. The remaining stories capture the strange—sometimes heartbreaking, sometimes funny—circumstances he encounters in the no-longer-simple act of survival; trying to protect squatters against floods in a place where the rain never stops, being harassed (and possibly infected) by a man sick with a virulent flu, enduring a job interview with an unstable assessor who has access to all his thoughts, taking the gravely ill on adventure tours. But we see in each story that, despite the violence and brutality of his days, the narrator retains a hold on his essential humanity—and humor. Things We Didn’t See Coming is haunting, restrained, and beautifully crafted—a stunning debut.