Acheter 10 livres pour 10 € ici !
Bookbot

Kali White

    Kali White élabore des récits qui explorent les complexités des relations humaines et la tension psychologique. Ses œuvres plongent dans les facettes les plus sombres de la nature humaine, soulignant la manière dont les personnages naviguent entre les conflits internes et externes. La prose de White est incisive et captivante, entraînant les lecteurs dans les paysages émotionnels profonds de ses personnages. Son approche se caractérise par une représentation méticuleuse de la profondeur psychologique et des nuances du comportement humain.

    The Monsters We Make
    • The Monsters We Make

      • 272pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      3,8(3348)Évaluer

      For fans of Rene Denfeld and Shari Lapena comes a rich, atmospheric family drama set in the 1980's following the disappearances of two paperboys from a small midwestern town. It's August 1984, and paperboy Christopher Stewart has gone missing. Hours later, twelve-year-old Sammy Cox hurries home from his own paper route, red-faced and out of breath, hiding a terrible secret. Crystal, Sammy's seventeen-year-old sister, is worried by the disappearance but she also sees opportunity: the Stewart case has echoes of an earlier unsolved disappearance of another boy, one town over. Crystal senses the makings of an award winning essay, one that could win her a scholarship - and a ticket out of their small Iowa town. Officer Dale Goodkind can't believe his bad luck: another town and another paperboy kidnapping. But this time he vows that it won't go unsolved. As the abductions set in motion an unpredictable chain of violent, devastating events touching each life in unexpected ways, Dale is forced to face his own demons. Told through interwoven perspectives--and based on the real-life Des Moines Register paperboy kidnappings in the early 1980's--The Monsters We Make deftly explores the effects of one crime exposing another and the secrets people keep hidden from friends, families, and sometimes, even themselves.

      The Monsters We Make