Cette auteure plonge dans le monde de la littérature pour créer des récits captivants. Son écriture est riche en profondeur, explorant souvent des émotions et des relations humaines complexes. Les lecteurs découvrent dans ses œuvres un style unique et un aperçu de la condition humaine qui résonne longtemps après la dernière page. Ses romans sont une invitation à la réflexion et à l'enrichissement.
The collection of short poems explores a transformative journey from darkness to light, emphasizing self-discovery and empowerment. It highlights the responsibility and honor that comes with recognizing one's inner light, encouraging readers to share their newfound strength with the world. Through evocative language, the poems inspire personal growth and the importance of illuminating the lives of others.
(Book). Robert Shelton met Bob Dylan when the young singer first arrived in New York. He became Dylan's friend, champion, and critic. This book, first published in 1986, was hailed as the definitive unauthorized biography of this moody, passionate genius and his world. Dylan gave Shelton access to his parents, Abe and Beatty Zimmerman whom no other journalist has ever interviewed in depth; to his brother, David; to childhood friends from Hibbing; to fellow students and friends from Minneapolis; and to Suze Rotolo, the muse immortalized on the cover of Freewheelin', among others. No Direction Home took 20 years to complete and received widespread critical acclaim. Two decades on, Dylan's standing is higher than at any time since the 1960s and Shelton's book is now seen as a classic of the genre. Today, everything Bob Dylan does guarantees saturation media coverage, and a new edition of No Direction Home is long overdue. This new edition, published to coincide with Dylan's 70th birthday on May 24, 2011, restores significant parts of Shelton's original manuscript and also includes key images of Dylan throughout his incredible, enduring career, alongside updated footnotes and bibliography, and a new selective discography, making it a must for all Dylan aficionados. Listen to Elizabeth Thomson live at Book Expo America on the BEA Podcast.
When a deed to a Paris apartment is discovered in an old attic trunk, an estranged mother and daughter must come together to unveil the hidden life of their family matriarch. Hannah Bond, a devoted bookworm, leaves her tumultuous life in Florida behind for a serene existence leading Jane Austen-themed tours in the British countryside. However, her world is upended on New Year's Eve when she returns to her London flat to find her mother, Marla, waiting for her with a black eye from her ex-boyfriend and an envelope containing the deed to the Paris apartment, an old key, and newspaper clippings about the death of a renowned writer, Andres Armand. Hesitant about her mother's intentions, Hannah reluctantly agrees to travel to Paris. There, they uncover great-grandma Ivy's apartment, frozen in 1940 and shrouded in dust. Inside, they find clues about Ivy's life, including a diary filled with tales of evenings spent with Hemingway, the Fitzgeralds, and other legendary expatriates. As they explore the city, they seek to understand why Ivy concealed her Parisian identity from future generations. This heartwarming saga set in the City of Lights celebrates the enduring bond between mother and daughter.