This is the House My Mother Built
Short Stories
de Mitzi Akaha
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"Great stories that constantly float over a deep and disturbing reality, until it finally capsizes and drowns everyone in murky despair." — Greg Wlasiuk, fellow writer
With This is the House My Mother Built, future best-selling author Mitzi Akaha unveils her "oh-so sad" short stories to the public for the very first time. Full of humor and tenderness, her debut collec-tion explores the trials and tribulations of childhood, and her stories have been praised for "capturing the extreme inno-cence and extreme cruelty in children" (Geoff Mak, fellow writer). Her narratives span the bleakest years of adolescence while maintaining "a wonderful sense of what's interesting and fascinating about characters" (Yiyun Li, author of The Vagrants and A Thousand Years of Good Prayers). The personalities found in these five stories could easily be mistaken for real people—sympathetic, oftentimes irra-tional, and very human in their imperfec-tion. But from the adolescent boy's bed-room to the trailer park, it's all fiction, down to the color of the sky, dramatic twists on perceivable realities, exercising what Lucy Corin (Everyday Psychokillers and The Entire Predicament) calls "an extra-ordinary confidence in storytelling."
Put simply, perhaps Koji Frahm, fellow future best-selling author, said it best:
"She's cute, like her stories."
Características y detalles
- Categoría principal: Literatura y ficción
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Características: 13×20 cm
N.º de páginas: 78 - Fecha de publicación: jun. 02, 2009
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MITZI AKAHA was born in 1987 in Ohio and raised in Monterey, California. A student of the University of California in Davis, she studies creative writing and Japanese. Her post-graduation plans are unknown as of yet, no more than a prolongation of her usually improvised days, though some options include: leeching off her father's hard work and patronage in Monterey Institute's Japanese translation classrooms; removing herself from the comfort of friends and family in California to immerse herself in Japan, given the required financial support. [If not Japan, any exotic country will do, (or if not an exotic country, she would happily settle for a foreign American city.)] In short, her aspirations are many, having sprouted from childhood fantasies of bagging groceries in snug paper bags into such vocational posts as travel writer, love poet, educator of children, entertainer of readers, serigrapher, designer, maritime professor, balloon sculptor, and so on. She lives wherever she can a