Marble Springs

Internal Copies

ELL-W-83-1

Broken Condition

Copy published by Eastgate Systems, Inc. on 3.5in Floppy Disk in 1993.

Runs on Mac with HyperCard. OS 7 and under does not run. Contains manual, floppy disk, and Eastgate Systems advertisement. 1.0 version. Grey disk is broken. Folio cover is worn and faded.

ELL-W-83-2

Good Condition

Copy published by Eastgate Systems, Inc. on CD-ROM in 1993.

Runs on Mac with HyperCard. OS 7 and under does not run. Contains manual and CD. 1.0 version. Folio cover is worn and faded.

Tested and working on the following operating systems:

      ELL-W-83-3

      Acceptable Condition

      Copy published by Eastgate Systems, Inc. on CD-ROM in 1993.

      Runs on Mac with HyperCard. OS 7 and under does not run. Bundled with story Stone Moons, ELO Hyper Papers html site, and ELO Notes html site. Contains manual and CD. 2.0 version. CD title is hand written and is signed "for Diane Slattery".

      Tested and working on the following operating systems:

          ELL-W-83-4

          New Condition

          Copy published by Eastgate Systems, Inc. on Flash Drive in 1993.

          Contains Hypercard program, version 1.0, version 2.0, and archival version 2.0.

          ELL-W-83-5

          Acceptable Condition

          Copy published by Eastgate Systems, Inc. on 3.5in Floppy Disk in 1993.

          Grigar received this copy from Sarah Smith for use in the electronic literature lab in 2017. Floppy disk only. Bundled with Judy Malloy's "it's name was Penelope".

          Author(s)

          Deena Larsen

          First Published

          1993

          Original Publisher

          Eastgate Systems, Inc.

          Language

          English

          Description

          "Marble Springs, a complex and lyrical new work in the tradition of Spoon River Anthology and Winesburg, Ohio, explores the lives of the women who built the American West. Marble Springs invites the reader to explore a collection of poems discovered in the ruins of a church in an abandoned ghost town. The poems, like the lives of so many 19th century women, are anonymous, enticing the reader to discover the identity of the author hidden between the lines."--Eastgate Systems, Inc.

          External References