Saturday, November 7, 2009

Julia Robers In The Pocka Dot Dress

Memento mori!

of Margot S. Baumann




blurb:

Abbé Kilian kills the age of five his alcoholic physically violent father with a wasp nest. Then he is taken to Ticino in an institution for maladjusted adolescents. There begins a cruel time for him. Massimo, a gay inmate forces Abbé sexual acts. When the humiliations of a Day be too big, he tried to flee.
These memories follow Abbé his life and he does things that he can remember later only fragmentary. In order to finally gain the recognition and admiration, which it is entitled to his opinion, he decides to become a famous writer. But even this path paved with the death of Abbé.



The novel not only tells the story of the protagonist, but can take a soul at his life and find the trigger for his actions, lying in his childhood.
Some places - especially in the childhood of the protagonist and his relationship with his Father - are not for the squeamish, but I find these open descriptions make the story authentic and credible because it actually witnessed noticeable.
exciting, engaging, and just right for stormy autumn evenings by the fireplace. click to Amazon.

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