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Erica Stux

    Erica Stux s'est tournée vers l'écriture après une carrière en chimie, un chemin qu'elle a commencé après avoir eu des enfants. Ses premières œuvres exploraient la poésie et la prose pour enfants, évoluant vers des vers humoristiques pour adultes et, finalement, des pièces narratives plus longues. Elle est également auteure-compositrice et sa production littéraire aborde souvent des thèmes tels que la famille et l'humour. L'écriture de Stux se caractérise par son esprit ludique et sa perspicacité sur les joies et les tribulations quotidiennes de la vie.

    Sequins and Sorrow
    The Wonder Of Wings
    Who, Me? Paranoid? Humor, Humor Everywhere
    • "From reusing Saran Wrap to the 'care and feeding of dishwashers, ' Erica Stux, a delightfully funny, housewifely humorist, keeps us thoroughly entertained. One cannot read one chapter without being eager for the next. Don't start reading her unless it's okay to be late for an appointment. Entirely her own woman— original to a fault— Erica Stux writes in the superb tradition of Erma Bombeck and Dorothy Parker . . ." Shelley Berman, actor and comedian "I knew early on that Life is out to get me," writes Erica Stux in "Who, Me? Paranoid?" Instead of (or in addition to) curling up in the fetal position when faced with some of life's more interesting challenges— a cat that refuses to catch mice, the search for a nonexistent party, a hospital stay, a tax audit— she's learned to find the humor in the situation, and to make us laugh about it.

      Who, Me? Paranoid? Humor, Humor Everywhere
    • Sequins and Sorrow

      • 156pages
      • 6 heures de lecture

      Marty Diamond came from a poor black family in Ohio. How could she raise her handicapped son, who had never spoken a single word, and how could she afford the therapies he needed? She set out to become a topnotch exotic dancer, with additional hope of success as a singer and songwriter. Boyfriends came and went, but her truest friends proved to be white men. Her spunk, self-assurance, and determination led her through an adventurous life filled with joy, guilt, pride, and sorrow.Erica Stux tells this true story. A mutual friend brought the two together so that Marty's story could be written.

      Sequins and Sorrow