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The Meeting Place

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Printed: 140 pages, 6" x 9", perfect binding, cream interior paper (60# weight), black and white interior ink, white exterior paper (100# weight), full-colour exterior ink

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The Meeting Place

The Meeting Place is a simple even old fashioned story of family and loss. I rarely cry in the theatre - at least for emotional reasons - but there I was enjoying some new talent.

And I was bawling, with the joy of it and of the magic of a good yarn well put, the tears running down my cheeks like a bloody baby.”

- Mr Ralph McLean - 3RRR Radio

Who do you find living in a tree lined suburban street? A suburban family of five, as Craig and Sheryl apathetically deal with the death of their love. Their three children, David, Michelle and Rick relentlessly struggle with denial, contempt and rebellion. The sibling rivalry abounds with our protagonist David, openly discussing his sexuality within the realms of his family home. Whilst his father is never home to behold a view on leadership and with his mother abstaining from the truth, David struggles to hold his own place in the world. His circle of friends comforts him; however his longing for acceptance from his family remains poignant.

The wicked web we weave within the family unit evolves to greater forces, outwardly. As each member of the family travel their individual path, sometimes those individual units clash. Each journey is as important and creative as the other, yet they struggle for the greater importance and highest appraisal from other units. Acceptance is as important as is non-acceptance within David's family, yet brotherly love can only show its boundaries once tested and it fails.

As the story unfolds David takes us on a journey through a weekend of tragedy, which not even he could alter through misfortunes of fate. The relationship between denial and rebellion build a night of thick tension, exposing itself in the face of sodomy and complacency. As the tables turn and David's journey draws to an end, not even his bloodline can stop the outcome it first set up to accomplish.

Drifting in the ebb of fate and tragedy, denial confides solace within rebellion only to find apathy is his greatest comfort.