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Jessika Fleck

    Jessika Fleck crea historias para lectores jóvenes y de mediana edad con una energía vibrante que impregna su estilo único. Sus narrativas a menudo abordan las complejidades de la adolescencia y el viaje de autodescubrimiento, ambientadas en mundos imaginativos que cautivan al lector. Fleck se destaca en el desarrollo de personajes convincentes y en la creación de tramas intrincadas que resuenan profundamente con su audiencia. Su escritura se caracteriza por su ritmo dinámico y su narración inventiva, lo que la establece como una voz distintiva en la literatura juvenil contemporánea.

    Beware the Night (The Offering)
    Molly and the Twin Towers
    • Molly and the Twin Towers

      • 112 páginas
      • 4 horas de lectura

      Life in lower Manhattan is normal for Molly, her dads, and younger sister. But on September 11, 2001, everything changes. Molly and her younger sister, Adeline, are at school when the first plane hits the World Trade Center. When the Twin Towers fall, the city is thrown into chaos. Papa, a pilot, is flying, Dad can't be reached, and Gran, an EMT with the New York Fire Department, is at Ground Zero. It's up to Molly to find her sister and navigate a city she no longer recognizes.

      Molly and the Twin Towers
    • Beware the Night (The Offering)

      • 320 páginas
      • 12 horas de lectura

      On the island of Bellona, they worship the sun. Seventeen-year-old Veda understands that keeping the sun content ensures plentiful crops, peace and harmony, and a thriving economy. But as a member of the Basso class, she never reaps those benefits. Life as a Basso is one fraught with back-breaking work and imposing rules. Her close friendship with Nico is Veda’s one saving grace in a cruel world where the division between her people and the ruling Dogio is as wide and winding as the canals that snake through their island. But when Veda’s grandfather is chosen as the next sacrificial offering to keep the sun’s favor, Veda is forced to see the injustice of her world. Turning away from the sun means she must join the night—and an underground revolution she’s been taught to fear all her life.

      Beware the Night (The Offering)