Bookbot

Darren Groth

    Darren Groth est un auteur d'origine australienne qui s'est installé au Canada en 2007. Ses œuvres littéraires explorent les thèmes de l'adolescence et de la quête d'identité, se distinguant par un aperçu pénétrant de la psychologie des jeunes personnages. Groth capture avec brio les vies intérieures de ses protagonistes, mêlant souvent réalisme et éléments fabuleux. Sa prose se caractérise par une profondeur psychologique remarquable et un style narratif sensible, faisant de lui une voix littéraire contemporaine significative.

    Boy in the Blue Hammock
    Munro vs. the Coyote
    • Munro vs. the Coyote

      • 288pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      3,7(152)Évaluer

      Struggling with grief and anger after his sister Evie's death, sixteen-year-old Munro Maddux seeks a fresh start in Brisbane through a six-month student exchange. At Fair Go Community Village, where he volunteers as a "Living Partner," he forms connections with residents but finds his inner turmoil intensifying as he faces loss again. The haunting voice he calls "the Coyote" resurfaces with each new trauma. Munro must confront his past and find a way to silence the Coyote before it consumes him completely.

      Munro vs. the Coyote
    • Award-winning author Darren Groth presents an epic tale of a dog devoted to protecting the last member of his family, an intellectually disabled boy, as civilization collapses. In a world marked by isolation and scarcity, a tyrannical regime enforces its power, pitting neighbors against each other and suppressing dissent violently. The setting is the small Pacific Northwest town of Gilder, where Tao, a failed service dog, awakens to find his leash tied to the stairs, his leg broken, and his family slaughtered. With his world shattered, he contemplates waiting for the "hounds" to end his life. However, he encounters Kasper, a fifteen-year-old boy with a disability and the sole survivor of his family. Recognizing his duty, Tao resolves to guide Kasper through the devastated streets of Gilder to safety, aiming for the only refuge he can envision: the site of his training five years prior. This narrative explores themes of loss, loyalty, dissent, and ableism, posing a critical question of our time: when evil silences the people, who will protect those without a voice?

      Boy in the Blue Hammock