The Desert Places
Book (italiano):
<DIV><p>"Sparks's story collection swirls with a Tim Burton-like whimsy. . . . Modern fables in which epiphanies replace moral lessons and tales unfold with Grimm-like wickedness."?<I>Publishers Weekly</I>, on <I>May We Shed These Human Bodies</I> by Amber Sparks</p><p>"Kloss peers inside, like some kind of mad historian, and records all the best and the worst of us with a passion and sometimes prophetic fervor."?<I>The McNeese Review</I>, on <I>The Alligators of Abraham</I> by Robert Kloss</p><p>"Don't mistake this gorgeous and wholly original book for a blow-by-blow comic-book-style retelling of Moby-Dick. . . . Let it sit on your coffee table as testament to what all of us human beings can do if we stick with it."?Oprah.com, on <I>Moby-Dick in Pictures</I> by Matt Kish</p><p>This pocket-sized edition of a hybrid text by Amber Sparks and Robert Kloss explores the evolution of evil in worlds both seen and unseen and features full-color illustrations by Matt Kish, illustrator of the critically acclaimed <I>Moby-Dick in Pictures: One Drawing for Every Page</I>.</p><p><B>Amber Sparks</B> is the author of <I>May We Shed These Human Bodies</I>, released by Curbside Splendor in 2012. Her work has been widely published in print and online and you can find some of it at ambernoellesparks.com or follow her on Twitter @ambernoelle.</p><p><B>Robert Kloss</B> is the author of <I>The Alligators of Abraham</I>. His short fiction has been published in <I>Crazyhorse</I>, <I>Gargoyle</I>, <I>Unsaid</I>, and elsewhere. He can be found online at robert-kloss.com.</p><br></DIV>
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