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The album concept was inspired by the 1990 album True Voices, which was also made up of cover songs including one that Griffith recorded on Other Voices, Other Rooms – "Across The Great Divide", written by Kate Wolf.
A thirteen-year-old boy, Felix Sanders, has a life-threatening heart condition. While his family is vacationing in Costa Rica at a place called the Divide, the point where water flows to both the Pacific and Atlantic oceans, he passes out and he finds himself in an alternate world, where the Earth's mythical creatures are real and humans are a legend.
Hands Across the Divide is a sculpture in Derry, Northern Ireland. The statue was created by Maurice Harron, and erected in 1992. It stands on the western side of the Craigavon Bridge and symbolizes reconciliation between both sides of the political divide during The Troubles. [1] [2] [3] Hands Across the Divide
Red Hugh overlooking Curlew Pass Memorial to the Great Hunger in Ireland, Cambridge Common, Cambridge MA Hands Across the Divide/ Reconciliation, Derry. Maurice Harron (born 1946) is an artist, educator and public sculptor from Derry, Northern Ireland. He was educated at St Columb's College and at the Ulster College of Art and Design in Belfast.
Gloria Anzaldúa (1942–2004) was a prolific Chicana writer of prose, fiction, and poetry. [1] After moving from her native Texas to California in 1977, she exclusively focused on her writing, [2] publishing dozens of pieces of writing before her death. [3] She left behind several manuscripts in progress when she died. [3]
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; Across the Great Divide (The Band song)
Across the Great Divide (film), starring Robert Logan, Heather Rattray and Mark Edward Hall; Across the Great Divide (album), a 1994 album box set by The Band Across the Great Divide (song), a song by The Band; Across the Great Divide: the Band and America, a book (Hyperion, 1994) by Barney Hoskyns about the members and career of The Band ISBN ...
In May 1965, Allen Ginsberg arrived at Better Books, an independent bookstore in London's Charing Cross Road, and offered to read anywhere for free. [2] Shortly after his arrival, he gave a reading at Better Books, which was described by Jeff Nuttall as "the first healing wind on a very parched collective mind". [2]