"Carlisle Martin dreams of becoming a professional ballet dancer like her mother Isabel. She only gets to see her father Robert, and his brilliant but troubled partner James, for a few precious weeks a year when she visits their enchanted apartment in Greenwich Village. James educates her in all that he holds dear in life: literature, music, and most of all, dance. As the years go by, Carlisle is desperate to be asked to stay permanently, even as AIDS brings devastation to their community. Instead, a passionate love affair creates a rift between them, with devastating consequences that reverberate for decades to come. Nineteen years later, Carlisle receives a phone call which unravels the fateful events of her life . . ."--Publisher
Meg Howrey Livres
Meg Howrey crée des romans qui explorent les complexités de la motivation et de la connexion humaines. Sa prose distinctive, marquée par une perspicacité psychologique aiguisée et un langage lyrique, transporte les lecteurs dans la vie intérieure de ses personnages. À travers son écriture, elle aborde des thèmes profonds tels que l'identité, la perte et la quête de sens dans un monde souvent incertain. Son œuvre est saluée pour sa profondeur littéraire et sa résonance émotionnelle.





Blind Sight
- 304pages
- 11 heures de lecture
Seventeen-year-old Luke Prescott navigates a summer in Los Angeles after his famous father invites him to escape his bohemian upbringing. Immersed in the glitzy world of celebrity, he experiences location shoots, glamorous parties, and the stark contrast between his father's public image and private life. As Luke grapples with his identity and the new narrative he constructs, he faces challenges that lead him to question his own history and the influences of his unconventional family.
I threw my neck out in the middle of Swan Lake last night. So begins the tale of Kate Crane, a soloist in a celebrated New York City ballet company who is struggling to keep her place in a very demanding world. At every turn she is haunted by her close relationship with her younger sister, Gwen, a fellow company dancer whose career quickly surpassed Kate’s, but who has recently suffered a breakdown and returned home. Alone for the first time in her life, Kate is anxious and full of guilt about the role she may have played in her sister’s collapse. As we follow her on an insider tour of rehearsals, performances, and partners onstage and off, she confronts the tangle of love, jealousy, pride, and obsession that are beginning to fracture her own sanity. Funny, dark, intimate, and unflinchingly honest, The Cranes Dance is a book that pulls back the curtains to reveal the private lives of dancers and explores the complicated bond between sisters.
As they look to the stars, what are they missing back home? The best of Helen Kane exists in space. If she doesn't go back up, she'll be consigned to a lesser version of herself on a planet that has also seen better days. Helen is an experienced astronaut with a NASA position and a struggling grown-up daughter who needs her but when, at 53, she is offered a place on the training programme for the first mission to Mars, the most realistic simulation ever, she cannot refuse a last chance to walk among the stars