Più di un milione di libri, a un clic di distanza!
Bookbot

Caroline Brooks DuBois

    Caroline Brooks DuBois crea narrazioni che fondono poesia e prosa, esplorando le profondità dell'esperienza umana con un controllo sensibile e artistico del linguaggio. Il suo approccio unico alla narrazione invita i lettori in mondi intricati, caratterizzati da una voce distintiva. Oltre alle sue attività letterarie, si dedica a coltivare giovani talenti, dimostrando un profondo impegno per le arti. Il suo lavoro risuona con una qualità lirica e un'esplorazione ponderata delle complessità della vita.

    The Places We Sleep
    Ode to a Nobody
    • Ode to a Nobody

      • 304pagine
      • 11 ore di lettura

      A devastating tornado tears apart more than just houses in this striking novel in verse about a girl rebuilding herself.Before the storm, thirteen-year-old Quinn was happy flying under the radar. She was average. Unremarkable. Always looking for an escape from her house, where her bickering parents fawned over her genius big brother. Inside our broken home / we didn't know how broken / the world outside was. But after the storm, Quinn can't seem to go back to average. Her friends weren't affected by the tornado in the same way. To them, the storm left behind a playground of abandoned houses and distracted adults. As Quinn struggles to find stability in the tornado's aftermath, she must choose: between homes, friendships, and versions of herself.Nothing that was mine / yesterday is mine today.Told in rich, spectacular verse, Caroline Brooks DuBois crafts a powerful story of redemption as Quinn makes her way from Before to After. There's nothing average about the world Quinn wakes up to after the storm; maybe there's nothing average about her, either. This emotional coming-of-age journey for middle grade readers proves that it's never too late to be the person you want to be.

      Ode to a Nobody
    • The Places We Sleep

      • 272pagine
      • 10 ore di lettura

      Twelve-year-old Abbey's world is turned upside-down by both personal and national events of September 11, 2001, as well as their aftermath, but finds greater strength through art, friendship, and family

      The Places We Sleep