Aún puedes pedir antes de Navidad 2 días y 14 horas
Bookbot

Darren Groth

    Darren Groth es un autor de origen australiano que se trasladó a Canadá en 2007. Su obra literaria se adentra en temas de la adolescencia y la búsqueda de identidad, caracterizada por una aguda comprensión de la psicología de los personajes jóvenes. Groth captura magistralmente las vidas interiores de sus protagonistas, fusionando a menudo el realismo con elementos fabulísticos. Su prosa destaca por su profunda perspectiva psicológica y un estilo narrativo sensible, consolidándolo como una voz literaria contemporánea significativa.

    Boy in the Blue Hammock
    Munro vs. the Coyote
    • Munro vs. the Coyote

      • 288 páginas
      • 11 horas de lectura

      Struggling with grief and anger after his sister Evie's death, sixteen-year-old Munro Maddux seeks a fresh start in Brisbane through a six-month student exchange. At Fair Go Community Village, where he volunteers as a "Living Partner," he forms connections with residents but finds his inner turmoil intensifying as he faces loss again. The haunting voice he calls "the Coyote" resurfaces with each new trauma. Munro must confront his past and find a way to silence the Coyote before it consumes him completely.

      Munro vs. the Coyote
    • "Award-winning author Darren Groth's epic story of a dog who will protect the last remaining member of his family, an intellectually disabled boy, at all costs as human civilization crumbles around them. In a time of isolation and scarcity, a regressive regime rules with absolute power, turning neighbour against neighbour and crushing dissidence with deadly force. A microcosm of this monstrous time: the tiny Pacific Northwest town of Gilder. In a house on the fringes of the decimated hamlet, Tao--a failed service dog turned pet--wakes to find his leash tied to the stairs, his hind leg broken and his family killed. With the world he knows shattered, there is one course of action: lay with his slain masters and wait for the enemy--the "hounds"--to return and end his life. But it is not the hounds that find him--it is Kasper, fifteen years old, disabled, limited ability to speak, sole survivor of the family. With the discovery of Boy, Tao understands he now has a duty: guide the last living member of his pack through the ravaged streets of Gilder to safety. The destination? The only refuge he can conceive in a world gone mad? The site of his training five years before. Boy in the Blue Hammock is an epic tale of loss and loyalty, of dissent and destruction, of assumption and ableism. With a powerful narrative and evocative prose, the novel poses one of the important questions of our time: When evil silences the people, who will protect those without a voice?"-- Provided by publisher

      Boy in the Blue Hammock