Bookbot

Garrick Jones

    Cet auteur crée une fiction gay historique captivante, explorant en profondeur les relations et la vie intérieure des hommes. Ses récits plongent souvent dans les détails intimes de la connexion humaine, laissant place à l'imagination du lecteur pour combler les vides. Chaque histoire est portée par des intrigues complexes impliquant des espions, des détectives ou des drames épiques, garantissant une expérience fascinante. Avec une approche axée sur la recherche, l'auteur recrée méticuleusement l'atmosphère et les expériences vécues de ses personnages, tout en célébrant les aspects uniques de l'identité et de l'histoire australiennes.

    The House with a Thousand Stairs
    Wheelchair: Antarctica. Snow and Ice
    • Wheelchair: Antarctica. Snow and Ice

      • 398pages
      • 14 heures de lecture

      You can never judge an academic book by its cover. Simon Dyson, a quiet assistant professor, is a man of hidden depths. To the world he presents as a harmless, innocuous, shy and retiring intellectual. However, the man who lurks behind that public persona is far more interesting ... and dangerous ... and driven.'Wheelchair' is a slow-burn contemporary psychological crime thriller about a man who suffers from both OCD and PTSD, a man who is unwittingly caught up in a cross-border war between rival crime gangs-a conflict that almost leads to his death, and more than once.It's a study of compulsion and of disability, and of the many faces of emotional dependence and sexual compulsion. It's about how some men cannot just love or make love because their hearts or their bodies lead them to it, but who can only connect emotionally and physically through self-imposed rituals which involve struggle or self-abasement.

      Wheelchair: Antarctica. Snow and Ice
    • The House with a Thousand Stairs

      • 354pages
      • 13 heures de lecture

      Warrambool In Gamilaraay, the language of the Kamilaroi peoples of north-western New South Wales, it's the word for The Milky Way. It's also the name of Peter Dixon's homestead and sheep station, situated in the lee of the Liverpool Ranges. In 1947, Peter returns from war, his parents and younger brother dead, the property de-stocked and his older brother, Ron, having emptied out the family bank account and nowhere to be found. The House With a Thousand Stairs is the story of a young man, scarred both on the inside and the outside, trying to re-establish what once was a prosperous and thriving sheep station with the help of his neighbours and his childhood friend, Frank Hunter, the local Indigenous policeman. Enveloped by the world of Indigenous spirituality, the Kamilaroi system of animal guides and totems, Peter and Frank discover the true nature of their predestined friendship, one defined by the stars, the ancestral spirits, and Baiame, the Creator God and Sky Father of The Dreaming. Maliyan bandaarr, maliyan biliirr.

      The House with a Thousand Stairs