the language of stars

I believe in the power of words and art to love and transform spirit, soul, and self. This is where I praise God in His everlasting glory and splendor.

The sun has one kind of splendor, the moon another and the stars another; and star differs from star in splendor. 1 Corinthians 15:41

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Buffy Jang is a high school senior and a genius at programming. Driven by the lure of success, Buffy wants to have it all: an Ivy League education, millionaire status, and validation for her work and talent. After becoming an atheist after the disappearance of her father, she turns her attention to the popular VR game World of Eden. Ridden with secularism antagonizing and mocking Christianity, World of Eden has changed the gaming sector through its incorporation of brain computer interfaces (BCIs). The creator of World of Eden, Sai Tanaka, has reached cult god status due to his innovative invention that has combined neuroscience with the latest technological advancements. Buffy Jang idolizes Sai Tanaka and aims to work at his company, Eden Enterprises. Bluffing and coding her way into a coveted internship, she ends up working for Eden Enterprises while juggling college applications. During her internship, she accidentally sends a virus throughout World of Eden, which infects the brains of all of the players. People start to commit egregious crimes due to the evolution of sin pervading through society. Struggling to undo the damage with the aid of her friend and mentor, Luke Tanaka, Buffy embarks on a journey that leads her to overcome her cynicism and ambition with love for people and the truth behind what happened to her father. Buffy rediscovers God and her faith is restored.

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Sarah Lee Townsend is not one destined for the stars. Or so she thought. A writer first, an artist second, and a daughter and sister third, she mourns the loss of her father while writing for her local school newspaper in Arkansas. With aspirations to be a journalist, she submits her essay to a national competition and wins an internship to the New York Times. Leaving behind her family and all she’s ever known, she enters the wide unknown of the stained city, as she likes to call it. Shunned by the “popular kids” and vast majority of her metropolitan high school and not able to adjust to city and corporate life, she finds solace in her newly found Christian club. She meets friends there, Mark, Luke, and Chloe and Zoe. Volunteering at soup kitchens, engaging in Bible study, prayer and praise, going to church, and breaking the soil with worship, Sarah Lee and her friends grow together, gain together, and lose together.