![]() |
||||
|
|
||||
To see animation click on an image below - it will take a few seconds for the animation to play correctly. The image size is 240px X 320px. However, if you like a design and it doesn't work on your phone, I can resize it for you - contact me. To save the animation on your computer right-click on the animation you are viewing and choose "Save Picture As," then upload it to your mobile phone (recommended method). To install it on your cell phone use the PC connection available to you (Serial, USB, IR, Bluetooth...etc.) and upload the animations to your phone (this method could take three or four minutes). |
||||
Visit iPhone iCandy for for a wide slection of free wallpapers
|
||||
| "The Other Side To This Life" is available as a free eBook download - click on image below.
Glasser
presents a harsh and uncompromising view of the Vietnam era military and
San Francisco street life during the mid 1960s. At the onset of the first
chapter, the reader becomes ‘the traveler’ on a series of
surreal adventures spanning the socially volatile years between 1965 –
1969. Along the way, we encounter strange and nefarious characters, drugs,
and the social turmoil |
"After The Rain" is available as a free eBook download - click on image below.
After the Rain" is a continuation of his last novel "The Other Side to This Life." This episode takes the reader on the eclectic adventures of a resilient survivor whose life's course is determined by the unpredictable winds of fate. More than often, he ends up in precarious and dangerous predicaments. Often, the only options open to him to extricate himself from the situations is by jumping out of the frying pan into the fire. Glasser begins this adventure in 1969 Mexico when the Mexican Government was still recovering from the 1968 Mexico City Olympic massacre where the Army troops killed over 200 student protesters. The story continues through the ups and downs in main character's life on a journey into the economic recession in the early 1980s as a homeless drifter attempting to hitchhike across the United States. In "After the Rain" Glasser relentlessly drives the reader through the quintessential post Vietnam American experience reminiscent of the Kerouac "On the Road" style story. |
|||