Rise, then Descend

Fiction & Literature, Anthologies, Historical
Cover of the book Rise, then Descend by Nick Stokes, Nick Stokes
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Nick Stokes ISBN: 9781311036414
Publisher: Nick Stokes Publication: March 22, 2014
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Nick Stokes
ISBN: 9781311036414
Publisher: Nick Stokes
Publication: March 22, 2014
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

A modern dispossessed man climbs a sacred mound that an ancient native civilization builds. They descend. Rise, then Descend, a short story, was first published in Crab Orchard Review, Vol. 18 #1.

From Rise, then Descend:
"Did the ancients use walking sticks when climbing the mound? He’s not sure what kind of man needs a walking stick to walk. You just move your feet one front of the other. An old man might need a walking stick. But he is not old. He is old, compared to how old people used to get. Maybe are designed to get. He wishes he were old.
Doctor said to use the hiking poles. That they’d give him a more thorough workout. Okay. That they’d save his knees on the way down that blessed mound however many times a day if that’s the way he had to do it. Okay. He didn’t need to pay for knee trouble too. That they’d ensure he doesn’t fall. He doesn’t believe in insurance and what kind of man falls climbing a hill? But okay. He does the hiking poles. Pansy, but that doesn’t stop him.
His tremors don’t stop him.
Thirty-five some-odd degree rain blowing horizontal in his face doesn’t stop him. Climbing in a monumental refrigerator he built back when he built refrigerators doesn’t stop him. Won’t see nobody up here today, which the opposite of stops him. Can’t see nothing from the top. Doesn’t stop him."

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

A modern dispossessed man climbs a sacred mound that an ancient native civilization builds. They descend. Rise, then Descend, a short story, was first published in Crab Orchard Review, Vol. 18 #1.

From Rise, then Descend:
"Did the ancients use walking sticks when climbing the mound? He’s not sure what kind of man needs a walking stick to walk. You just move your feet one front of the other. An old man might need a walking stick. But he is not old. He is old, compared to how old people used to get. Maybe are designed to get. He wishes he were old.
Doctor said to use the hiking poles. That they’d give him a more thorough workout. Okay. That they’d save his knees on the way down that blessed mound however many times a day if that’s the way he had to do it. Okay. He didn’t need to pay for knee trouble too. That they’d ensure he doesn’t fall. He doesn’t believe in insurance and what kind of man falls climbing a hill? But okay. He does the hiking poles. Pansy, but that doesn’t stop him.
His tremors don’t stop him.
Thirty-five some-odd degree rain blowing horizontal in his face doesn’t stop him. Climbing in a monumental refrigerator he built back when he built refrigerators doesn’t stop him. Won’t see nobody up here today, which the opposite of stops him. Can’t see nothing from the top. Doesn’t stop him."

More books from Historical

Cover of the book The Shepherd and the Solicitor by Nick Stokes
Cover of the book Hochzeit im Herrenhaus by Nick Stokes
Cover of the book The Lifeboat by Nick Stokes
Cover of the book Historical Exklusiv Band 72 by Nick Stokes
Cover of the book Remarkable Vashie by Nick Stokes
Cover of the book Freedom by Nick Stokes
Cover of the book Kill-Devil And Water by Nick Stokes
Cover of the book Emory Upton by Nick Stokes
Cover of the book BELLIGERENT by Nick Stokes
Cover of the book The Flame Bearer by Nick Stokes
Cover of the book Bloodlines by Nick Stokes
Cover of the book The Sweetness of Forgetting by Nick Stokes
Cover of the book Promise of Morning, The (At Home in Beldon Grove Book #2) by Nick Stokes
Cover of the book The 9/11 Dogs: The heroes who searched for survivors at Ground Zero (HarperTrue Friend – A Short Read) by Nick Stokes
Cover of the book An Unexpected Pleasure by Nick Stokes
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy