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[Note to web editors: Please keep this paragraphing. If you lump everything into one paragraph, you bury the hopes for emphasis and clarity.] The '60s and '70s were epic times: the Apollo Moon Flights and our own Trojan War, followed by a personal and national search for homecoming. Epimetheus, whose name means Afterthought, lived in his car because he wished to be a singer. His car, a '68 Ford Falcon, is a trifling detail until Apollo 15 launched lunar lander Falcon and its extraterrestrial Rover. Anon, a Chrissian prophet detailed the expected landing. Then: "A little later, Falcon will give…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
[Note to web editors: Please keep this paragraphing. If you lump everything into one paragraph, you bury the hopes for emphasis and clarity.] The '60s and '70s were epic times: the Apollo Moon Flights and our own Trojan War, followed by a personal and national search for homecoming. Epimetheus, whose name means Afterthought, lived in his car because he wished to be a singer. His car, a '68 Ford Falcon, is a trifling detail until Apollo 15 launched lunar lander Falcon and its extraterrestrial Rover. Anon, a Chrissian prophet detailed the expected landing. Then: "A little later, Falcon will give birth to the Rover." Epi thrilled to hear Apollo's call. No, he is not Homer, but he is a rovering rhapsode, and he is meant to sing of Apollo. Apollo, who calls us to know ourselves, and act on that knowledge.
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Autorenporträt
Keith Fahey is most unknown for his essay "On Reading with an Equal Eye," in Leviathan, a Melville journal (May 2011). "Falcon Will Give Birth" was conceived in 1968 with the Vision of Apollo. Keith didn't know he was pregnant. He was surprised when the gravidity lasted years, then decades. Nurturing this new life kept him bound to his Apolline commitment, and fired his will to live--a big deal to the son of a suicide.