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Bridget Pitt

    Bridget profundiza en temas trascendentales, desde la pérdida temprana hasta las disyuntivas éticas de la ingeniería genética. Su escritura explora la condición humana, examinando los impactos de las luchas sociales y las complejidades de la ciencia. Desde sus primeros intentos poéticos hasta sus novelas preseleccionadas para premios, su obra se caracteriza por la honestidad y la profundidad. La prosa de Bridget es directa y perspicaz, diseccionando temas con un agudo sentido del detalle y la verdad psicológica.

    Notes from the Lost Property Department
    Black Lion
    • Black Lion

      • 288 páginas
      • 11 horas de lectura

      Wilderness guide Sicelo Mbatha shares lessons learnt from a lifetime's intimate association with Africa's wildest nature.

      Black Lion
      4,1
    • Notes from the Lost Property Department

      • 327 páginas
      • 12 horas de lectura

      Iris Langley is forced to take charge when her mother, Grace, has a stroke. This is no easy task: Iris suffers from the lingering effects of a near-fatal fall as a child. The accident turned her mind into a place where a dragon lives: one that roars in her ears and fills her head with smoke. As her mother retreats into dementia, Iris realises that Grace is hiding something – a secret about that fateful day in the mountains that could threaten everything she believes about herself and her family. But with her own memory fragmented, and Grace’s mind in tatters, how can she find the truth? Set against the sombre beauty of the Drakensberg mountains, Bridget Pitt’s powerful new novel takes us into the labyrinthine world of brain injury, and reveals how the strands of guilt, secrecy and devotion that bind mother to daughter may devastate or redeem them. ‘The struggle to forget, or not; courage in small things – Bridget Pitt’s new novel has found a voice for wounded memory. It’s a searching voice, evoking from jumbled discards something that perhaps we’ve all lost … but which might still be found.’ – Jeremy Cronin

      Notes from the Lost Property Department