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Adult FictionArt Corriveau's adult fiction often deals with mature themes and subject matter that may not be suitable for children. Parent discretion is advised.
Housewrights
(Novel) Lily Willard scandalizes Cabot Fields, Vermont, when she waltzes with Oren and Ian Pritchard together at a town dance. The twins are the last in a line housewrights--itinerant carpenters who roam New England building homes for strangers. Will they finally settle with Lily, or will they all be run out of town? Auf de anderen Seite des Tals
(Roman) Als die kleine Lily in jenem magischen Sommer die Zwillings-brüder Oren und Ian kennen lernt, glaubt sie noch nicht an schicksalhafte Begegnungen. Die Brüder sind traditionelle Hausbauer und werden das neue Haus de Familie bauen. Als Oren zehn Jahre später zu irh zurückkehrt und um ihre Hand anhält, ahnt Lily nicht, dass sie bald zwei Männern ihr Jawort geben und irh Schicksal damit besiegeln wird. Blood Pudding
(Short stories) Blood Pudding chronicles the broken lives of people on the margins and the families and friendships that piece them back together. From a street hustler in Montreal and a priest in Burkina Faso, to the mother of a bride in Boston and a blind woman in Amsterdam, crisis gives rise to magical moments of shared recovery. Serving up equal portions of drama and resolution, these offbeat tales offer a satisfying glimpse into the universality of the human condition. Children's Fiction13 Hangmen
(Middle-grade novel) When Tony DiMarco unexpectedly inherits his great uncle's town house in Boston, he finds himself in the middle of a murder, a mystery and a treasure hunt—through three hundred yeas of American history. How I, Nicky Flynn, Finally Get a Life (and a Dog)
(Middle-grade novel) Nicky Flynn’s life just got a whole lot harder. Not only have Nicky’s parents just gone through a messy divorce—forcing him to start a new life, in a new city, in a new school—but now his mom has totally gone behind his back and brought home Reggie, an eighty-pound German shepherd, from the animal shelter. Turns out, Reggie is far from an ordinary pound mutt: he’s a former seeing-eye dog. Trouble is, nobody’s ever told Reggie he’s retired… |