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Sylvia Brownrigg

    16. Dezember 1964

    Sylvia Brownrigg gestaltet Erzählungen, die sich mit den Feinheiten menschlicher Verbindungen und komplexen emotionalen Landschaften auseinandersetzen. Ihre Prosa zeichnet sich durch scharfe psychologische Einblicke in ihre Charaktere und eine subtile, aber präzise Sprachverwendung aus. Mit einem unfehlbaren Gespür für Details und Atmosphäre konstruiert sie Geschichten, die den Leser in die intimen Welten ihrer Protagonisten entführen. Ihr Schreiben erforscht Themen wie Identität, Verlangen und die vielschichtige Natur von Beziehungen.

    Sylvia Brownrigg
    Morality Tale
    The Whole Staggering Mystery
    Invisible Countries
    The Whole Staggering Mystery
    Geschrieben für Dich
    Keusch wie Eis
    • JD lebt an der amerikanischen Ostküste und hat gerade seine Arbeit verloren. Er verbringt seine Zeit damit, Betrachtungen über die Leute, die ihm begegnen und deren Leben anzustellen und beginnt ein Internettagebuch. Pi lebt an der Westküste und hat bei den großen Bränden alles verloren. Auch ihre Doktorarbeit über die Kantsche Philosophie. Sie findet das Internettagebuch von JD und beginnt ihm zu schreiben. Irgendwann antwortet er. Eine moderne und feinsinnige Liebesgeschichte entwickelt sich.

      Keusch wie Eis
    • Flannery Jansen betritt eine neue Welt. Sie ist Erstsemesterin an einer Universität an der Ostküste. Eines Morgens entdeckt sie in einem Diner beim Campus eine faszinierende Frau, die in ein Buch vertieft ist: Anne Arden, Dozentin im Fachbereich Literaturwissenschaft – selbstbewusst, lebenserfahren, weltgewandt. Und in Flannerys Augen die schönste Frau der Welt. Flannery träumt Tag und Nacht von Anne. Sie verzehrt sich nach ihr. Sie geht ihr aus dem Weg. Und will ihr doch nahe sein. Eines Tages fasst sie sich ein Herz und lädt Anne zu einem Drink ein.

      Geschrieben für Dich
    • The Whole Staggering Mystery

      A Story of Fathers Lost and Found

      • 336 Seiten
      • 12 Lesestunden

      A lost package reveals family secrets spanning generations, prompting Sylvia Brownrigg to explore her father Nick's and grandfather Gawen's lives. Nick, a hippie and absent father, contrasts with Gawen, an enigmatic Englishman who wrote a novel about lesbian lovers before his mysterious death in Kenya. As Sylvia uncovers their stories, she navigates themes of sexuality, silence, and the impact of divorce, ultimately piecing together her own fractured narrative against the backdrop of 1930s London and California's redwoods.

      The Whole Staggering Mystery
    • Invisible Countries

      • 40 Seiten
      • 2 Lesestunden

      A woman travels to seven invisible countries, and from the moment of arrival she is surprised, challenged, and disturbed by what she discovers.

      Invisible Countries
    • Morality Tale

      • 240 Seiten
      • 9 Lesestunden
      2,0(1)Abgeben

      The story explores the complexities of a modern marriage through the lens of humor and relationships. The narrator encounters Richard, an intriguing envelope salesman with a knack for Zen philosophies, who provides a refreshing escape from her challenging domestic situation. Their interactions reveal the comedic and sometimes chaotic nature of love and commitment, highlighting the triangular dynamics that often complicate personal connections.

      Morality Tale
    • Pages for Her

      • 304 Seiten
      • 11 Lesestunden
      3,8(108)Abgeben

      'A complex portrait of two women's sexuality . . . an absolute pleasure' Alice SeboldFlannery, a writer with one well-known rather racy book to her name, is, by her own admission, in a situation she never thought she'd be: married to a man who overshadows her and defined by her primary relationships as wife and mother. When Flannery is invited to a writers' conference she sees a chance to return to a world she knew well. And then she recognizes the name of the chair of the event: Anne Arden. Suddenly Flannery is thrown back twenty years to her eighteen-year-old self and the most intense love affair of her entire life. On the other side of the world Anne is travelling for work. Recently out of a decades-long partnership, she feels adrift, unsettled. When a friend asks her to chair an event at a writers' conference she says yes and a couple of months later, on the same campus where they met and fell in love, Anne and Flannery are reunited. Though their lives have taken them in different and unexpected directions, the pull between them proves irresistible. Elegant, clever, witty and sensual, Sylvia Brownrigg's Pages for Her is a novel about love, memory and what it is to be a woman, a wife, and a mother.

      Pages for Her
    • The Delivery Room

      • 300 Seiten
      • 11 Lesestunden
      3,3(17)Abgeben

      In 1998, Serbian therapist Mira Braverman finds herself in her North London flat, a space her husband humorously calls the Delivery Room. As she listens to her troubled patients, Mira realizes her own life is intertwined with their struggles: her husband Peter faces illness, NATO's threats against Serbia intensify, and hidden truths from her past threaten to surface. The contrasts between war and peace, life and death, highlight the preciousness of everyday moments often taken for granted. Engaging with Mira's world reveals a refreshing appreciation for life's small joys. The author’s talent for character creation shines as she weaves together the narratives of patients and therapist, creating a sense of trespass and revelation. Critics praise the novel as a stunning exploration of themes like birth, death, war, and loss. It is described as grippingly readable, with a rich texture and detail that allow for a deeper understanding of character and plot. The work stands out for its ambition and commitment, making it one of the most striking novels of the year, both intellectually stimulating and highly enjoyable.

      The Delivery Room
    • Ten Women Who Shook the World

      Stories

      • 144 Seiten
      • 6 Lesestunden

      Across a series of vivid, untamed landscapes Sylvia Brownrigg's characters wander in search of the obvious--love, fame, a good recipe for canapes--as well as the less obvious. In "Hussy from the West" the narrator undertakes a long erotic quest for satisfaction; in "The Bird Chick" a visionary organizes some unusual park inhabitants for a bold experiment in theater. In Sylvia Brownrigg's starkly original "Ten Women Who Shook the World," wherever these maverick women travel, their bold, comical voices urge us to follow.

      Ten Women Who Shook the World