Ebook {Epub PDF} Peach by Emma Glass
Her debut novel Peach will be published in February Emma Glass was born in Swansea. She studied English literature and creative writing at the University of Kent, then decided to become a nurse and went back to study children's nursing at Swansea University. She lives in South London and is a research nurse specialist at Evelina London Children's Hospital/5. · Peach by Emma Glass is published by Bloomsbury at £, and is available from the Guardian Bookshop for £Author: Marta Bausells. · While Denton and Makumbi play fast and loose with time, Emma Glass’s Peach unfurls in a more constricted framework. It opens in the aftermath of an attack on the narrator, Peach, and closes a Author: Stuart Evers.
Read reviews and buy Peach - by Emma Glass (Hardcover) at Target. Choose from contactless Same Day Delivery, Drive Up and more. Peach, the debut novel from Emma Glass, is written in this www.doorway.ru words spin out from the page, into and around your head; they have accepted definitions, but they take on new meanings the more you see of them, in the same way that any word starts to feel strange in your mouth if you say it again and again. Something has happened to Peach. Staggering around the town streets in the aftermath of an assault, Peach feels a trickle of blood down her legs, a lingering smell of her anonymous attacker on her skin. It hurts to walk, but she manages to make her way to her home, where she stumbles into another oddly nightmarish reality: Her parents can't seem to comprehend that anything has happened to.
"'Peach' is a short, experimental, and gut-wrenching debut novel from Emma Glass Glass's work is startling, haunting, and original." - The Riveter, "Books to Read in January" "Peach is shocking, revealing and deals with a subject which most authors would shy away from. It is uncomfortable, worthy and brave. Peach by Emma Glass – Book review. Short, sharp, hard hitting and playing with your perception, Peach by Emma Glass is a unique, little (98 pages) story that uses every word with purpose to give us a visceral experience of – trigger warning here – a young woman trying to wrestle with her feelings post-rape. Opening sentence: Thick stick sticky sticking wet ragged wool winding round the wounds, stitching the sliced skin together as I walk, scraping my mittened hand against the wall. In Peach, a stream-of-consciousness narrative about a girl reeling in the aftermath of a brutal rape, Glass confronts us with the bodily and psychological trauma left behind. The Huffington Post. A strange and original work of art that manages to be both genuinely terrifying and undeniably joyful.
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