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Valerie Miner

    Valerie Miner crea narrativas resonantes que profundizan en las complejidades de la conexión humana y la búsqueda de identidad en medio de los cambios sociales. Su prosa se caracteriza por una aguda perspicacia y una profunda empatía, explorando a menudo la vida interior de sus personajes y sus paisajes sociales interconectados. A través de una narración convincente, ilumina temas de familia, comunidad y el impacto duradero del cambio. La voz distintiva de Miner invita a los lectores a contemplar experiencias compartidas y la persistente búsqueda de pertenencia.

    Konkurrenz
    Mord auf dem Campus
    Bread and Salt
    Range of Light
    • Range of Light

      • 301 páginas
      • 11 horas de lectura

      Two old friends who have not seen each other for decades spend a week hiking through the stunning scenery of California's High Sierra Twenty-five years ago, a group of five high schoolers trekked through the High Sierra. Now, two of them--lesbian Kath and straight Adele--come back to repeat their journey and renew their friendship. In chapters that alternate between the women's voices, they reveal their pasts, their thoughts, and their reactions both to the scenery and to each other. For Kath, the sublime topography of the Sierra is inspiring and invigorating. Adele is more trepidatious. Over the course of their journey up to High Country, old stories, tensions, dreams, and disappointments come to the surface. A unique study of the complexity of the bonds between women, this transporting book, written with elegance and restraint, is among Miner's finest work.

      Range of Light
    • Bread and Salt

      • 272 páginas
      • 10 horas de lectura

      Compelling and vivid, the stories in Bread and Salt use the metaphor of salvage to consider the reclamation of the natural environment, human relationships, and material objects. The characters in these stories live and travel in Tunisia, India, Indonesia, Italy, Turkey, France, and the United States and consider their individual agency in both local and global contexts. The characters' conflicts reveal how family and friendships are enriched by differences.

      Bread and Salt