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Stephen Brotherton

    Cette auteure apporte une perspective unique à la littérature, façonnée par des décennies d'expérience dans le domaine de la santé et des services sociaux. Son travail puise dans de profondes expériences personnelles pour explorer les complexités des relations humaines. À travers un récit captivant raconté sous forme de vignettes à la première personne, l'auteure dévoile des histoires de premier amour, de séparation et de retrouvailles après des décennies. Ce processus d'écriture a été cathartique, et elle partage maintenant avec enthousiasme ces récits intimes avec ses lecteurs.

    Mum and Boy
    Fractures, Dreams and Second Chances
    Watching the Wheels
    An Extra Shot
    • An Extra Shot

      • 200pages
      • 7 heures de lecture
      4,4(6)Évaluer

      An Extra Shot continues to tell the story of Freddie and Jo-Jo. It moves backwards and forwards through time in a series of first-person flashbacks and describes how the couple fell in love as teenagers, why they drifted apart, what happened in their lives away from each other, and what happens when they meet up again over thirty-five years later.

      An Extra Shot
    • A collection of short stories - a killer created from abuse, a teenager in search of answers from his older brother who committed suicide ten years earlier, a man in a care home wanting a great adventure, and a range of other fractured human beings looking for answers, trying to survive.

      Watching the Wheels
    • Their story is a love story, but it also asks questions about the impact of early life trauma, the degree to which this travels with us down the years and the impact it can have on our relationship with others and the wider world.

      Fractures, Dreams and Second Chances
    • Mum and Boy

      • 96pages
      • 4 heures de lecture

      Four individual and complex stories about human development and the psychological nature of the mum and boy relationship. They explore the potential complexity of this connection and show how it can go badly wrong.

      Mum and Boy