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Carrie Smith

    Carrie Smith crée des mystères captivants et de la fiction littéraire, reconnue pour ses intrigues complexes et son développement profond des personnages qui plongent les lecteurs dans des enquêtes complexes et des drames humains. Elle explore les aspects plus sombres de la vie urbaine et les complexités de la psyché humaine. Son écriture offre un mélange distinctif de suspense et d'intuition psychologique.

    Revolting families
    Marital Separation and Lethal Domestic Violence
    The Page is Printed
    Song of Love
    Silent City: A Claire Codella Mystery
    • Silent City: A Claire Codella Mystery

      • 500pages
      • 18 heures de lecture
      4,0(2)Évaluer

      "NYPD Detective Claire Codella has just won a tough battle with cancer and lands a high-profile case on her first day back to work. As she races to track down the killer, she uncovers dirty politics, questionable contracts, and dark secrets. Each discovery brings her closer to the truth, but may cost Codella her life"--

      Silent City: A Claire Codella Mystery
    • The Page is Printed

      Ted Hughes's Creative Process

      • 256pages
      • 9 heures de lecture

      The book delves into Ted Hughes's poetic evolution by examining his drafts, typescripts, and correspondence, revealing the intricate layers of his creative process. It uncovers the hidden narratives behind his work, providing insights into his artistic development. Additionally, it proposes innovative methods for studying authorship, reshaping the understanding of Hughes as a significant literary figure of the twentieth century through the lens of his unseen creative history.

      The Page is Printed
    • Revolting families

      • 216pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      Revolting Families places the literary depiction of familial and intimate relations in 1960s West Germany against the backdrop of public discourse on the political significance of the private sphere. Carrie Smith-Prei focuses on debut works by German authors considered to be part of the "new" and "black" realism movements: Dieter Wellershoff, Rolf Dieter Brinkmann, Gisela Elsner, and Renate Rasp. Each of the works by these authors uses depictions of neurosis, disgust, vertigo, or violence to elicit a reaction in readers that calls them to political, social, or ethical action. Revolting Families thus extends the concept of negativity, which has long been part of post-war German philosophical and aesthetic theory, to the body in German literature and culture. Through an analysis of these texts and of contextual discourse, Smith-Prei develops a theoretical concept of corporeal negativity that works to provoke socio-political engagement with the private sphere.

      Revolting families