新澳门六合彩内幕信息

新澳门六合彩内幕信息

College of Arts & Sciences

CAS Chronicles

Assistant Professor Brenda Peynado and her new novella, 鈥淭ime's Agent.鈥 (Photos provided by Brenda Peynado, image by Dakota Galvin)

Assistant Professor Brenda Peynado and her new novella, Time's Agent.鈥 (Photos provided by Brenda Peynado, image by Dakota Galvin)

新澳门六合彩内幕信息professor鈥檚 new sci-fi novella, 鈥淭ime鈥檚 Agent,鈥 explores love, loss, time travel, and robots

What would you do for a fresh start 鈥 especially if it comes at someone else鈥檚 expense? What makes a life worth living? These are some of the questions explored in Assistant Professor Brenda Peynado鈥檚 new novella, 鈥淭ime鈥檚 Agent,鈥 a story following humanity鈥檚 discovery of 鈥減ocket worlds鈥 鈥 alternative realities with limitless potential.

Peynado, an assistant professor in the Department of English, centers her story around Raquel, an archaeologist desperate to redeem herself who uses these pocket worlds to seize the chance to confront what it means to save something鈥攐r someone鈥攆rom time.

鈥淎s I started writing Time鈥檚 Agent, I grappled with my ideas of what makes life worth living, or whether creating a new life is worth doing, in an imperfect world that can cause so much sorrow,鈥 Peynado explained.

鈥淚n many ways [working in IT] was a dream job: I traveled all over the world, snuck into data centers, tracked hackers, set traps for those hackers鈥owever, something was missing from my life, and I found myself more and more disengaged with what I was doing,鈥 Peynado recalled.

鈥淎s part of that, I had to put on the page what I see as the source of all that sorrow, not just in this world, but in a plethora of worlds where humanity could have started over and created itself anew. I also had to contend with [the main character鈥檚] own complicity in the sorrows of the world.鈥

鈥淭ime鈥檚 Agent鈥 is set in the Dominican Republic, where Peynado鈥檚 family is from.

鈥淸The Dominican Republic] has a history of colonialism, neo-colonialism, political violence, and economic exploitation. What does it mean to have a fresh start or hope for a better future in the context of that history? How can we both grieve that history and stop those forces without ignoring our past?鈥 Peynado said.

鈥淚 hope my readers leave the book with a feeling of contemplative hope, a suspicion that there is a better world for humanity, but we have to open our eyes to how we get there and defend it with everything we have.鈥

Though creative writing has always been a passion for Peynado, it was not originally a part of her career plan. With a bachelor's degree in computer science, she worked as an IT auditor for a time before returning to Tampa to be with her family. There, she took a creative writing class with the Department of English that changed everything.

鈥淚n many ways [working in IT] was a dream job: I traveled all over the world, snuck into data centers, tracked hackers, set traps for those hackers鈥owever, something was missing from my life, and I found myself more and more disengaged with what I was doing,鈥 she recalled.

鈥淭aking a creative writing class at 新澳门六合彩内幕信息helped me realize how much writing stories fulfilled me, and it was the tipping point for me deciding to do an MFA and later PhD in fiction.鈥

Today, Peynado teaches fiction in the same classroom where鈥痵he made this life-changing decision.

鈥淚n the end, I left the career path that was the most interesting to follow the one that was the most personally meaningful.鈥

When asked about her writing process, Peynado explained that writing 鈥淭ime鈥檚 Agent鈥 was a unique experience compared to her short story collection, The Rock Eaters, which explores Latina girlhood, and the novel she is currently working on, about the 1965 Dominican Civil War and a girl who can see all possible futures.

鈥淭his one started simply with a very crystalized idea and plot that grew from there. It really informed my teaching of novel writing, how to pull out a singular seed that can grow from the massive tangle that students often bring into my novel-writing classes." 
Her advice for students and other creatives looking to get their work published: Don鈥檛 rush it.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e viewing writing as an end product, you will waste your whole life chasing the next mark of approval that will validate all your effort. Instead, find joy and validation in the process of writing itself. Then, if publication comes, so much better.鈥

Learn more about 鈥淭ime鈥檚 Agent鈥 and .

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CAS Chronicles is the monthly newsletter for the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息's College of Arts and Sciences, your source for the latest news, research, and events at CAS.