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Nathan Oates

    Nathan Oates crea cuentos que profundizan en los intrincados paisajes de la psicología humana y las complejas relaciones. Su estilo distintivo y su prosa atmosférica crean una profundidad única en sus narrativas. Oates explora a menudo cuestiones existenciales y la búsqueda de significado en un mundo ambiguo. Su obra es celebrada por su inteligencia y resonancia emocional.

    Flaw in the Design
    A Flaw in the Design
    The Empty House
    Stability
    • Stability

      How an Ancient Monastic Practice Can Restore Our Relationships, Churches, and Communities

      • 162 páginas
      • 6 horas de lectura

      Exploring the theme of stability in a fast-paced world, the author invites readers to reflect on the foundational aspects of faith rooted in God's unchanging nature. Drawing from Benedictine spirituality and personal experiences, he encourages embracing a deeper connection to one's core instead of simply seeking action or change. This approach highlights the importance of inner peace and stillness, presenting a thoughtful alternative to the common choices of movement or endurance, urging a journey toward the source of life and true fulfillment.

      Stability
    • The Empty House

      • 196 páginas
      • 7 horas de lectura

      The author, Nathan Oates, holds a Ph.D. in English and Creative Writing from the University of Missouri and has garnered multiple nominations for the Pushcart Prize. Residing in Brooklyn, he serves as an assistant professor of English at Seton Hall University, blending his academic expertise with his creative pursuits.

      The Empty House
    • Flaw in the Design

      • 286 páginas
      • 11 horas de lectura

      "As a creative writing professor in a bucolic Vermont town, Gil's quiet life is indelibly changed when he receives shocking news: His sister, Sharon, and her husband have been killed in a car accident, and their only son, seventeen-year-old Matthew, is coming to live with Gil and his family. It's with apprehension that Gil and his wife, Molly, greet Matthew. Yes, he has just lost both his parents. But they haven't seen him in seven years, and the last time the families were together Matthew lured Gil's young daughter into a terrifying, life-threatening situation. Since that incident Gil has been estranged from his sister and her flashy, vastly wealthy banker husband. And now: Matthew is their charge, living under their roof. The boy seems charming, smart, and urbane, if surprisingly unaffected by his parents' death. Gil hopes that they can put the past behind them, though he's surprised when Matthew signs up for his creative writing class. Then Matthew begins turning in chilling stories about the imagined deaths of Gil's family and his own parents. Bewildered and panicked with fear and rage, Gil ultimately decides he must take matters into his own hands, before life imitates art"--

      Flaw in the Design