"Once upon a time there was a writer who didn't know what to write. She had everything she needed to do it: a computer, a functioning plug socket, some comfy slippers and a decent amount of time.
Collection of short stories, in which the author focuses her attention on a series of female characters who, for various reasons, are accompanying someone on a journey that at first does not concern them, but which gives rise to episodes that reve
Érika has learned everything she knows on the streets. She has just turned twenty, but people always say she seems older. Perhaps its her gaze, which seems older than her years.
Cinto turns 100 on Sunday and his whole family is staying with him for the weekend. Over the years, he has taught them all the stars and constellations, the names of which he first learnt during the Civil War.
The novel tells the story of a young woman in contemporary Barcelona. It is narrated in the first person with a Joycean ‘a day in the life of…’ style of voice, although the novel takes place over several different days.
Writers Ola Yevguènieva, Véra-Margarita Abansèrev, Vitali Kroptkin, Aleksandr Vòlkov and Iosif Bergxenko were unbeknownst to me before Anastàssia Maxímovna sent me their short stories. To me, they are part in the fictionalization of fiction.