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Marian Womack

    Marian Womack est une écrivaine d'une vision singulière, qui explore les thèmes de la mémoire, de l'identité et de l'intersection culturelle. Sa prose se caractérise par une qualité lyrique et une capacité à évoquer des atmosphères évocatrices qui entraînent le lecteur dans ses récits. L'œuvre de Womack explore fréquemment les complexités de l'expérience humaine, cherchant un sens dans l'ambiguïté. Ses contributions au discours littéraire et culturel sont profondes et stimulantes.

    Beyond the backroom
    On the Nature of Magic
    The Golden Key
    The Swimmers
    Lost Objects
    • Lost Objects

      • 142pages
      • 5 heures de lecture
      4,4(9)Évaluer

      Set in a richly imagined world, this novel explores themes of identity, transformation, and the intersection of nature and technology. The narrative follows a protagonist navigating complex relationships and societal expectations, all while uncovering secrets that challenge their understanding of reality. With its blend of speculative elements and deep character development, the story offers a thought-provoking experience that resonates with contemporary issues. The book's critical acclaim includes a shortlist nomination for the BSFA Awards 2018.

      Lost Objects
    • A claustrophobic, literary dystopia set in the hot, luscious landscape of Andalusia from the author of The Golden Key.After the ravages of global warming, this is place of deep jungles, strange animals, and new taxonomies. Social inequality has ravaged society, now divided into surface dwellers and people who live in the Upper Settlement, a ring perched at the edge of the planet's atmosphere. Within the surface dwellers, further divisions occur: the techies are old families, connected to the engineer tradition, builders of the Barrier, a huge wall that keeps the plastic-polluted Ocean away. They possess a much higher status than the beanies, their servants.The novel opens after the Delivery Act has decreed all surface humans are 'equal'. Narrated by Pearl, a young techie with a thread of shuvani blood, she navigates the complex social hierarchies and monstrous, ever-changing landscape. But a radical attack close to home forces her to question what she knew about herself and the world around her.

      The Swimmers
    • The Golden Key

      • 336pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      2,6(560)Évaluer

      "...Part Shirley Jackson's stories of inner demons, part Alice's Adventures in Wonderland...part Astrid Lindgren's faith in children's resilience and part ghost story." "Enter a mysterious world in the hands of capable women. Getting drawn into this story is easy; getting out again is trickier." -BookPage 1901. After the death of Queen Victoria, England heaves with the uncanny. Séances are held and the dead are called upon from darker realms. Helena Walton-Cisneros, known for her ability to find the lost and the displaced, is hired by the elusive Lady Matthews to solve a twenty-year-old mystery: the disappearance of her three stepdaughters who vanished without a trace on the Norfolk Fens. But the Fens are an age-old land, where folk tales and dark magic still linger. The locals speak of devilmen and catatonic children are found on the Broads. Here, Helena finds what she was sent for, as the Fenland always gives up its secrets, in the end...

      The Golden Key
    • On the Nature of Magic

      • 416pages
      • 15 heures de lecture

      Spanning London's occult seances to the Parisian catacombs, two women claim to have seen Marie Antoinette's ghost in the garden of Versailles in this Gothic supernatural mystery where magic and science collide.

      On the Nature of Magic