Begleiten Sie uns auf eine literarische Weltreise!
Buch zum Bücherregal hinzufügen
Grey
Einen neuen Kommentar schreiben Default profile 50px
Grey
Jetzt das ganze Buch im Abo oder die ersten Seiten gratis lesen!
All characters reduced
to make monsters out of girls - cover

Wir entschuldigen uns! Der Herausgeber (oder Autor) hat uns beauftragt, dieses Buch aus unserem Katalog zu entfernen. Aber kein Grund zur Sorge, Sie haben noch mehr als 500.000 andere Bücher zur Auswahl!

to make monsters out of girls

Amanda Lovelace, ladybookmad

Verlag: Andrews McMeel Publishing

  • 1
  • 38
  • 0

Beschreibung

Winner of the 2016 Goodreads Choice Award for Best Poetry, amanda lovelace presents her new illustrated duology, “things that h(a)unt.” In this first installment, to make monsters out of girls, lovelace explores the memory of being in an abusive relationship. She poses the eternal question: Can you heal once you’ve been marked by a monster, or will the sun always sting?
Verfügbar seit: 18.09.2018.

Weitere Bücher, die Sie mögen werden

  • Storm Clouds & Silver Linings: My Journey - cover

    Storm Clouds & Silver Linings:...

    Tom Stodulka

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Life, love, and work intertwine with nature in a unique series of poems. No matter what the day-to-day challenges are, Tom Stodulka tries to face each day with positivity as life unfolds from beginning to end. 
     
    Journey with Tom through tales of Australian life, discover local flora and fauna, and learn from his experiences in his work as a mediator. Tom shares his deep appreciation of nature and his passion for his work and takes the listener on a journey through life.
    Zum Buch
  • After All We Have Travelled - cover

    After All We Have Travelled

    Sarala Estruch

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    After All We Have Travelled,the debut poetry collection by Sarala Estruch, is a distinctive journey across time, continents and cultures, through memory and generations of family history, exploring the long legacies of empire and its personal and political effects. It is a story of intergenerational trauma, grief and disconnection, but it is also a story of the enduring power of love, of connection, and of embarking into motherhood.
    Combining elements of memoir, biography, and fiction with formal and experimental poetry, Estruch's work explores the losses incurred by forbidden interracial and intercultural marriage, and is a potent reclamation of voice, story, and mixed-race identity. An important, compelling collection, it asks: What or who is family? What or where is home? And like the modern rose – a hybrid species with origins spanning the globe – to where do we return?
    'After All We Have Travelled follows a young woman discovering her own complex history across cultures and languages, religions and lost histories. Where family mythologies meet silence, memory gives an emotive reasoning, singing into the void left by death and distance, using the lyric voice of self-making. This book charts a new terrain, a multiplicity of being mapped for future generations whose relationship to home is as yet unknown to its forebears.' – Sandeep Parmar
    Zum Buch
  • Song (Donne version) - cover

    Song (Donne version)

    John Donne

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Librivox volunteers bring you seven different readings of the short poem Song by John Donne, a weekly poetry project. Song is a bitter little poem on the falsity of women: search the world for ages, see mythical wonders, but you’ll not find a true woman. Deep hurt is the bane of the loving heart. (Summary by Peter Yearsley)
    Zum Buch
  • Heart Over Time - cover

    Heart Over Time

    Marie Barrett

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Heart over Time encapsulates the sense of intrigue, of appointed times and of personal election that permeates the writer's work throughout. Marie Barrett's poetry and prose has a 'Jacob's ladder' type feel to it, the journey of life winding and rewinding itself with new revelations revealed in old themes. From her first book, The Witnesses, which was written under instructions from the words in a dream: ‘Write about your experiences in London and call the book The Witnesses.’ a follow-up to Over the Boundaries, in which a wide spectrum of emotions are confronted. In Heart over Time, eschatological concerns are particularly to the fore, stemming most poignantly from the recent death of her husband. The internal rhythms of the speech of her soul find a companion in nature and in the silent workings of the seasons and the universe and have a hypnotising effect that draws the reader in its wake to a state of shared metaphysical being.
    Zum Buch
  • I'd Rather Eat Pants - cover

    I'd Rather Eat Pants

    Peter Ackerman

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    What do fast-talking, New York octogenarians, Abe and Mabel, do when their life-long grocery store, Pepperstein Produce, is driven out of business by Wonder Food? They embark on the ultimate road trip with a nineteen year-old stoner, Wisdom, to Los Angeles to become actors.An L.A. Theatre Works full-cast production, starring Edward Asner, Jonathan Banks, Ed Begley Jr., Emily Bergl, Dan Castellaneta, Derek Cecil, Bob Edwards, Clea Lewis, Anne Meara, Kendall Schmidt and Susan Stamberg.Directed by Gordon Hunt. Recorded in front of a live audience by L.A. Theatre Works.
    Zum Buch
  • Jerusalem (NHB Modern Plays) - cover

    Jerusalem (NHB Modern Plays)

    Jez Butterworth

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A comic, contemporary vision of life in England's green and pleasant land. Winner of the Evening Standard Award for Best Play, and the Critics Circle and Whatsonstage.com Awards for Best New Play.
    On St George's Day, the morning of the local country fair, Johnny 'Rooster' Byron, local waster and Lord of Misrule, is a wanted man. The council officials want to serve him an eviction notice, his son wants to be taken to the fair, a vengeful father wants to give him a serious kicking, and a motley crew of mates wants his ample supply of drugs and alcohol.
    Jerusalem premiered at the Royal Court Theatre, London, in 2009, directed by Ian Rickson and starring Mark Rylance in an astonishing performance as Johnny Byron. It transferred to the West End in 2010.
    'Unarguably one of the best dramas of the twenty-first century' Guardian
    'Tender, touching, and blessed with both a ribald humour and a haunting sense of the mystery of things... one of the must-see events of the summer' Telegraph
    'Jez Butterworth's gorgeous, expansive new play keeps coming at its audience in unpredictable gusts, rolling from comic to furious, from winsome to bawdy' Observer
    'Storming... restores one's faith in the power of theatre' Independent
    'Show of the year'Time Out
    Zum Buch