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Amanda Skenandore

    Amanda es una autora cuyas obras profundizan en narrativas históricas, inspirándose en narradores clásicos y los paisajes que moldearon sus primeras percepciones. Su escritura a menudo explora la profundidad de la experiencia humana con un estilo que encarna sus extensos viajes y experiencias de vida únicas. Como narradora, se dedica a crear narrativas convincentes que resuenan en los lectores, al mismo tiempo que cultiva su distintivo estilo literario.

    The Undertaker's Assistant
    The Medicine Woman of Galveston
    The Nurse's Secret
    Between Earth and Sky
    The Second Life of Mirielle West
    • The Second Life of Mirielle West

      • 304 páginas
      • 11 horas de lectura
      4,1(21895)Añadir reseña

      Based on the true story of America's only leper colony, the Louisiana institution known as Carville, where thousands of people were stripped of their civil rights, branded as lepers, and forcibly quarantined throughout the entire 20th century. For Mirielle West, a 1920's socialite married to a silent film star, the isolation and powerlessness of the Louisiana Leper Home is an unimaginable fall from her intoxicatingly chic life of bootlegged champagne and the star-studded parties of Hollywood's Golden Age. At first she hopes her exile will be brief, but those sent to Carville are more prisoners than patients and their disease has no cure. Instead she must find community and purpose within its walls, struggling to redefine her self-worth while fighting an unchosen fate

      The Second Life of Mirielle West
    • Between Earth and Sky

      • 324 páginas
      • 12 horas de lectura

      "On a quiet Philadelphia morning in 1906, a newspaper headline catapults Alma Mitchell back to her past. A federal agent is dead, and the murder suspect is Alma's childhood friend, Harry Muskrat. Harry--or Asku, as Alma knew him--was the most promising student at the 'savage-taming' boarding school run by her father, where Alma was the only white pupil. Created in the wake of the Indian Wars, the Stover School was intended to assimilate the children of neighboring reservations. Instead, it robbed them of everything they'd known--language, customs, even their names--and left a heartbreaking legacy in its wake ... she barely recognizes the man Asku has become, cold and embittered at being an outcast in the white world and a ghost in his own. Her lawyer husband, Stewart, reluctantly agrees to help defend Asku for Alma's sake. To do so, Alma must revisit the painful secrets she has kept hidden from everyone--especially Stewart"--Amazon.com

      Between Earth and Sky
    • The Nurse's Secret

      A Thrilling Historical Novel of the Dark Side of Gilded Age New York City

      • 368 páginas
      • 13 horas de lectura
      3,9(11498)Añadir reseña

      Set in 1880s New York, this historical novel follows Una Kelly, a resourceful grifter who, fleeing from a wrongful murder accusation, cons her way into Bellevue Hospital's pioneering nursing school. As she navigates the challenges of a disciplined environment that contrasts sharply with her rough upbringing, Una learns about friendship and self-respect. However, her growing suspicions about a patient's death threaten to expose her true identity, forcing her to confront a choice between self-preservation and the welfare of others.

      The Nurse's Secret
    • The Undertaker's Assistant

      • 336 páginas
      • 12 horas de lectura

      An enthralling novel of historical fiction for fans of Lisa Wingate and Ellen Marie Wiseman, The Undertaker’s Assistant is a powerful story of human resilience set during Reconstruction-era New Orleans that features an extraordinary and unforgettable heroine at its heart. “The dead can’t hurt you. Only the living can.” Effie Jones, a former slave who escaped to the Union side as a child, knows the truth of her words. Taken in by an army surgeon and his wife during the War, she learned to read and write, to tolerate the sight of blood and broken bodies—and to forget what is too painful to bear. Now a young freedwoman, she has returned south to New Orleans and earns her living as an embalmer, her steady hand and skillful incisions compensating for her white employer’s shortcomings. Tall and serious, Effie keeps her distance from the other girls in her boarding house, holding tight to the satisfaction she finds in her work. But despite her reticence, two encounters—with a charismatic state legislator named Samson Greene, and a beautiful young Creole, Adeline—introduce her to new worlds of protests and activism, of soirees and social ambition. Effie decides to seek out the past she has blocked from her memory and try to trace her kin. As her hopes are tested by betrayal, and New Orleans grapples with violence and growing racial turmoil, Effie faces loss and heartache, but also a chance to finally find her place . . .

      The Undertaker's Assistant