January 11–February 5, 2012 | Happenings

"Woman on the Run" Novella

From October through December 2011, Frist Center Facebook fans and guests of the website were engaged in an online activity inspired by the exhibition Tracey Snelling’s “Woman on the Run.” As the story of the exhibition’s lead characters, Victor and Veronica Hayden, unfolded, participants were encouraged to elaborate on the many twists and turns of the couple’s relationship by participating in the “Woman on the Run” online activity. Facebook fans and guests of the website helped facilitate the urban storytelling of Veronica and Victor Hayden’s seedy tale by adding to the leads proposed by the Frist Center. All entries were read by Edgar Award winning mystery novelist, Steven Womack, and members of the Frist Center staff; selected writings have become chapters compiled into the novella found below.

This online activity was designed by the fans, for the fans.  A very special “thank you” to all who participated and made this fun and exciting activity a success!

Woman on the Run: A Novella

Read the novella online:

The activity produced two separate stories about the mysterious Veronica Hayden. Read both versions HERE:

Print a copy of Woman on the Run: A Novella:

Should you prefer your fiction firm in hand, CLICK HERE for a printable fold-and-staple book (this hand-held book will include both versions of the Veronica Hayden story).

A double-sided printer is recommended*. Click on the link above and set your print preferences to use both sides, flipping on the short edge:

  • PC:  Properties >> Layout >> Print on Both Sides: Flip on Short Edge
  • Mac: Copies & Pages/Preview >> Layout >> Two-Sided: Short-edge binding

If applicable, make sure to set Page Scaling: None

*You can use a single-side printer by printing all the odd pages first and then flipping the stack and sending it back through to print the even pages in reverse order or collating if necessary. (It’s not hard, but may take some finesse and a few practice pages.)

If you are printing to a copier, CLICK HERE for the necessary file.

Creating your book:

Fold it in half and staple the spine (lightly fold one side to fit into a standard stapler) and read easy!

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