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  Surviving the Sentence (Justice Knot Trilogy #2) - (2014)
Posted by: Frenuyum - 12-05-2025, 02:38 PM - Replies (1)

   


For many who've heard of the West Memphis Three-especially through "Devil's Knot" and/or the feature film based on that book, the story of their trials ended when the court handed down their sentences. For the teenagers, though, that moment marked the start of yet another story, one more dangerous than the first. Jason Baldwin was sixteen, the youngest of the three teenagers, when he heard himself sentenced to life in prison with no possibility of parole. "Dark Spell" is the account of what it was like to be taken in handcuffs and shackles into Arkansas's adult prison system, where inmates and guards alike saw him as a Satanic child-killer. Many of those who sent him there did not expect him to survive. Prison officials shared the same, realistic fear. More than once, death hovered perilously near. But Jason survived. He survived, day by day and year by year, in one of the harshest environments on American soil. This would be a hard story to bear, save that it is brightened and transformed by Jason's insight and upbeat persona. "Dark Spell" illuminates the many ways America's justice system, once having gone wrong, can fight to sustain that wrong. It celebrates the countless ordinary heroes who rose up, using art and new technology, to challenge trials they perceived as mockeries of justice.

At its heart, "Dark Spell" walks readers into prison with an innocent teenager and reveals how he managed to forge a life of honor by not abandoning his personal integrity, demanding an education, and discovering the peace to be found in kicking Hacky Sack.

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  Grief is the Thing with Feathers (2015)
Posted by: Frenuyum - 12-05-2025, 02:35 PM - Replies (1)

   



In a London flat, two young boys face the unbearable sadness of their mother's sudden death. Their father, a Ted Hughes scholar and scruffy romantic, imagines a future of well-meaning visitors and emptiness.

In this moment of despair they are visited by Crow - antagonist, trickster, healer, babysitter. This self-described sentimental bird is attracted to the grieving family and threatens to stay until they no longer need him. As weeks turn to months and physical pain of loss gives way to memories, this little unit of three begin to heal.

In this extraordinary debut - part novella, part polyphonic fable, part essay on grief, Max Porter's compassion and bravura style combine to dazzling effect. Full of unexpected humour and profound emotional truth, Grief is the Thing with Feathers marks the arrival of a thrilling new talent.

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  Jules - Le voleur d'enfants (1926)
Posted by: Frenuyum - 12-05-2025, 02:30 PM - Replies (1)

   


Sept ans, dit-on, est l'âge de raison mais cela n'empêche pas celui qui l'atteint de garder des années précédentes l'habitude du merveilleux prise à fréquenter les fées. Antoine Charnelet accepte donc sans effroi qu'une main inconnue l'entraîne à travers la foule loin de sa bonne pour le conduire chez le colonel Philémon Bigua.

Il y restera sans regret. Qui résisterait à la magie des récits que lui fait le colonel de son lointain pays natal- l'Amérique du Sud, à l'évocation des pampas, à l'atmosphère d'estancia qu'il recrée dans la maison?

C'est le colonel lui-même qui l'a volé, comme il a volé d'autres enfants malheureux : Joseph et les jumeaux. Une fille manque à cette famille acquise de si délictueuse façon. Marcelle s'y adjoint très licitement, de par la volonté de son père. Au moment où le colonel semble devoir enfin être heureux, tout craque car l'amour est entré dans l'appartement avec Marcelle - et joseph se rit d'autant mieux des serrures qu'il a soin d'en dérober les clefs.

L'aventure devient alors plus amère que l'océan sur lequel s'embarquent Bigua et les siens - amère comme les souvenirs d'enfance qui ont inspiré au poète ce conte nostalgique et tendre où blanchissent les cheveux des braves gens et brasillent les mirages de l'imagination.

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  Two Adolescents (1960)
Posted by: Frenuyum - 12-05-2025, 02:25 PM - Replies (1)

   



'Agostino'is the story of a sensitive, cloistered boy who, beyond all sense of proportion, loves and idolizes his youthful widowed mother. The shock of finding he is not the center of his mother's universe - that she is favorable to the attentions of a man of her own generation - is more than Agostino can stand. In an instinctive fumbling effort to gain self-respect and values, Agostino joins a gang of older boys who derisively and callously supply him with a quick and drastic sexual education. Agostino finds he has won knowledge without wisdom; and in the words of Moravia, "He has lost his first estate without having succeeded in winning another." Agostino is the true adolescent, familiar to everyone who recalls that confused tragi-comic period of their youth.


Luca is worlds apart in outlook from Agostino, more sophisticated, knowing and introspective - moody and on the threshold of maturity. Luca, perhaps, knows too much and thinks too much, and when his active mind questions the conventions and routine of everyday life he comes gradually to the conclusion that life is a monstrous conspiracy - a plot to make one conform at the expense of one's soul. His answer is a complete negation of the pattern of living - an austere and adolescent reaction that leads him, unwittingly, to the brink of death itself, and from which only the purge of violent illness and an unexpected romance save him, mentally and physically, and show him the way to maturity.


       

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  The Colonel's Children (1926)
Posted by: Frenuyum - 12-05-2025, 02:20 PM - Replies (1)

   


Seven, it is said, is the age of reason, but that does not prevent the one who reaches it from retaining from previous years the habit of the marvellous in frequenting fairies. Antoine Charnelet therefore accepted without fear that an unknown hand would drag him through the crowd away from his governess to take him to Colonel Philémon Bigua.

He will remain there without regret. Who could resist the magic of the stories told to them by the colonel of their distant native country - South America, the evocation of the pampas, the estancia atmosphere that he recreates in the house?

It was the colonel himself who stole him, as he stole other unfortunate children: Joseph and the twins.This family, acquired in such a criminal way., lacks a daughter; Marcelle joins legally, through her father's will.

Just when the colonel seems to be happy at last, everything cracks, because with Marcelle love has entered the apartment. Joseph laughs all the more at the locks because he takes care to steal the keys.

The adventure then becomes more bitter than the ocean on which Bigua and his family embark - bitter as the childhood memories that inspired the poet to write this nostalgic and tender tale in which the hair of good people whitens and the mirages of the imagination shine.

   

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