Robert Stone (1937–2015) was born in Brooklyn. The child of a schizophrenic mother, he spent several years in a Catholic orphanage, finally dropping out of high school to become a navy journalist. Later he studied with Wallace Stegner at Stanford University and traveled with Ken Kesey’s Merry Pranksters. He is the author of a short story collection and of numerous brilliant novels, including A Hall of Mirrors, which won the Faulkner Foundation Award; Dog Soldiers, winner of the National Book Award; and Death of the Black-Haired Girl.


ROBERT STONE and
KATE CHOPIN FEATURE

Children of Light

The Awakening

By Hand

The Lost Screenplay

by Robert Stone
1. EXTERIOR—DAY—LEBRUN’S HOTEL AND COTTAGES—GRAND ISLE, LOUISIANA, A SUNDAY IN JULY 1890

It is morning in high summer on the Gulf Coast. Across a field of waving yellow chamomile we see a sprawling white wooden building, a nineteenth-century resort hotel in the neo-Gothic style, two single-story wings extending from a three-story center. The building has a mansard roof topped with a decorative cupola. A high, wide porch stretches from wing tip to wing tip.

The building itself is in dim focus, seen through a prism of time. The field in the foreground is in sharp focus, bright, timeless summer.

We hear the buzz of summer insects, faraway music, a distant indistinct hum of voices in unison.

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