The Summer After June
Autor Ashley Warlicken Limba Engleză Paperback – 5 iun 2001
Suspenseful and sensuous, utterly compelling, THE SUMMER AFTER JUNE surpasses the enormous promise of Warlick's prizewinning first novel. "Ashley Warlick is wise beyond her years and gifted by a graceful insight not only into humanity's fears and foibles but also into its capacity to evolve, to be redeemed" (Oxford American).
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780618127306
ISBN-10: 0618127305
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 140 x 210 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: HarperCollins Publishers
Colecția Ecco
Locul publicării:United States
ISBN-10: 0618127305
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 140 x 210 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: HarperCollins Publishers
Colecția Ecco
Locul publicării:United States
Recenzii
Ashley Warlick's first book, "The Distance From the Heart of Things" won Houghton Mifflin's Literary Fellowship when the author was just 23. It was the kind of success that some young writers have trouble living down. But Warlick's second novel makes good on and surpasses the promise of the first. Boston Globe
"THE SUMMER AFTER JUNE by Ashley Warlick is a strong, moving novel about a young independent minded, courageous, gritty woman who, in despair over the murder of her sister takes her sister's baby and leaves home in Carolina to make a new life for the both of them on the Gulf coast. Lindy is a fierce, honest, winning character and the life she makes with love, a romantic spirit and determination is a triumph. A wonderful read, a wise and redemptive story." -- Susan Richards Shreve, author of WILL OF THEIR OWN, THE GIFT OF THE GIRL WHO COULDN'T HEAR and PLUM & JAGGERS Booklist, ALA
"...Warlick, (whose first novel, The Distance From the Heart of Things, was praised for its maturity and eloquence) has more ambitious aims in mind: to illuminate the lives and hearts of those whom love has damaged, to discoer whether healing and transformation can occur despite, or perhaps alongside, the presumed finality of death....What sets the novel apart is Warlick's writing, quietly haunting, infused with a knack for the unexpected image and an understanding of the core of human nature, which subverts what we think we know of women like Lindy and men like Orrin and the complex choices they make in the name of love." -- January 16, 2000 -- By Paula L. Woods The Los Angeles Times
"...Warlcik's novel succeeds in tenderly depicting the mysterious bonds of love and family." The New York Times
"Ashley Warlick lives deeply in the beautiful and carpentered sentences she uses to write her books. THE SUMMER AFTER JUNE is even better than THE DISTANCE FROM THE HEART OF THINGS, which was one of the best first novels of the past ten years. Warlick does that most uncommon thing: she grows better and deeper with each book." -- Pat Conroy
"Stories about starting over again, about self-discovery, have a tendency to veer off into sentimentalism. Not to worry. This is not one of those aimless tales of truck-stop gurus and long-winded philosophical asides delivered while searching for the self." The Chicago Tribune
"The nexus of the heat-and-humidity index often produces novels of feverish isolation, and Warlick's second book falls into this category. When Lindy Jain's older sister, June, is murdered, her barely comprehensible reaction is to light off to Galveston, where she spent summers as a child, with June's baby boy in tow. Her attempt to re-create her happy girlhood includes romancing an old family friend, camping out in her grandmother's crumbling house, and refusing to talk to her mother. There is an overabundance of incident here, but Lindy's convoluted responses to almost everything around her are so well drawn and so intimate that her breath practically riffles the pages." February 14, 2000 The New Yorker
"...the haunting tale of one woman's heartbreaking journey into the many realms of love, confirms Warlick's talent, first glimpsed in her debut THE DISTANCE FROM THE HEART OF THINGS..." Publishers Weekly, Starred
"There's plenty to like and admire about this book." The Baltimore Sun
"Warlick writes with sometimes breathtaking maturity in a voice eloquent with knowledge and understanding" The San Francisco Chronicle
"The writing is lovely and languid, with past and present seamlessly drifting back and forth. The physical settings in steamy Galveston are described so vividly that the bright sun could almost make you squint." USA Today
"At 25, grief-stricken, Lindy Jain kidnaps her murdered sister June's baby and flees a nursing job and fiance in Charlotte, N.C., to hide out in the empty house in Galveston, Tex., where the girls visited their grandmother every —
"THE SUMMER AFTER JUNE by Ashley Warlick is a strong, moving novel about a young independent minded, courageous, gritty woman who, in despair over the murder of her sister takes her sister's baby and leaves home in Carolina to make a new life for the both of them on the Gulf coast. Lindy is a fierce, honest, winning character and the life she makes with love, a romantic spirit and determination is a triumph. A wonderful read, a wise and redemptive story." -- Susan Richards Shreve, author of WILL OF THEIR OWN, THE GIFT OF THE GIRL WHO COULDN'T HEAR and PLUM & JAGGERS Booklist, ALA
"...Warlick, (whose first novel, The Distance From the Heart of Things, was praised for its maturity and eloquence) has more ambitious aims in mind: to illuminate the lives and hearts of those whom love has damaged, to discoer whether healing and transformation can occur despite, or perhaps alongside, the presumed finality of death....What sets the novel apart is Warlick's writing, quietly haunting, infused with a knack for the unexpected image and an understanding of the core of human nature, which subverts what we think we know of women like Lindy and men like Orrin and the complex choices they make in the name of love." -- January 16, 2000 -- By Paula L. Woods The Los Angeles Times
"...Warlcik's novel succeeds in tenderly depicting the mysterious bonds of love and family." The New York Times
"Ashley Warlick lives deeply in the beautiful and carpentered sentences she uses to write her books. THE SUMMER AFTER JUNE is even better than THE DISTANCE FROM THE HEART OF THINGS, which was one of the best first novels of the past ten years. Warlick does that most uncommon thing: she grows better and deeper with each book." -- Pat Conroy
"Stories about starting over again, about self-discovery, have a tendency to veer off into sentimentalism. Not to worry. This is not one of those aimless tales of truck-stop gurus and long-winded philosophical asides delivered while searching for the self." The Chicago Tribune
"The nexus of the heat-and-humidity index often produces novels of feverish isolation, and Warlick's second book falls into this category. When Lindy Jain's older sister, June, is murdered, her barely comprehensible reaction is to light off to Galveston, where she spent summers as a child, with June's baby boy in tow. Her attempt to re-create her happy girlhood includes romancing an old family friend, camping out in her grandmother's crumbling house, and refusing to talk to her mother. There is an overabundance of incident here, but Lindy's convoluted responses to almost everything around her are so well drawn and so intimate that her breath practically riffles the pages." February 14, 2000 The New Yorker
"...the haunting tale of one woman's heartbreaking journey into the many realms of love, confirms Warlick's talent, first glimpsed in her debut THE DISTANCE FROM THE HEART OF THINGS..." Publishers Weekly, Starred
"There's plenty to like and admire about this book." The Baltimore Sun
"Warlick writes with sometimes breathtaking maturity in a voice eloquent with knowledge and understanding" The San Francisco Chronicle
"The writing is lovely and languid, with past and present seamlessly drifting back and forth. The physical settings in steamy Galveston are described so vividly that the bright sun could almost make you squint." USA Today
"At 25, grief-stricken, Lindy Jain kidnaps her murdered sister June's baby and flees a nursing job and fiance in Charlotte, N.C., to hide out in the empty house in Galveston, Tex., where the girls visited their grandmother every —
Notă biografică
Ashley Warlick is the author of The Summer After June and The Distance from the Heart of Things, for which she became the youngest ever recipient of the Houghton Mifflin Literary Fellowship. She graduated from Dickinson College in 1994 and now lives in Greenville, South Carolina, with her family.