· “In Andrew Roe's The Miracle Girl, we're reminded that the desire for miracles always connotes dissatisfaction, even as it articulates a hope. Roe deftly explores this paradox with clean, sharp prose; the novel's intuitive, shifting structure (providing not only different character's perspectives but press releases, documents, and, really Brand: Workman Publishing Company, Inc. “In Andrew Roe's The Miracle Girl, we're reminded that the desire for miracles always connotes dissatisfaction, even as it articulates a hope. Roe deftly explores this paradox with clean, sharp prose; the novel's intuitive, shifting structure (providing not only different character's perspectives but press releases, documents, and, really. Andrew Roe's The Miracle Girl follows the life of Anabelle Vincent, a comatose girl who many believe grants miracles. Of course, there are skeptics who surround the young Anabelle, too, and so the novel asks readers to question whether they are believers or skeptics.
"The Miracle Girl" is an ambitious novel. Andrew Roe deftly navigates a narrative told through multiple points of view that somehow all comes together seamlessly. It's a story about hope, loss, faith, and the search for human connection that is poetically written yet an accessible page-turner. the miracle girl by Andrew Roe ‧ RELEASE DATE: Ap Personal tragedy meets the tragedy of our time in Roe's winning debut novel. Andrew Roe's debut adult novel, The Miracle Girl, is set in this era of uncertainty, and life is definitely full of that chaos for the Vincent family. Eight-year-old Anabelle Vincent is the titular character, and injured in an accident, she rests in a comatose state.
Andrew Roe is the author of The Miracle Girl. His fiction has been published in Tin House, One Story, The Sun, Glimmer Train, and other publications. His nonfiction has been published in the New York Times, San Francisco Chronicle, www.doorway.ru, and elsewhere. He lives in Oceanside, California, with his wife and three children. “In Andrew Roe's The Miracle Girl, we're reminded that the desire for miracles always connotes dissatisfaction, even as it articulates a hope. Roe deftly explores this paradox with clean, sharp prose; the novel's intuitive, shifting structure (providing not only different character's perspectives but press releases, documents, and, really productively, comments on web message boards) generates a multifaceted exploration into what it means to believe. One of the most intoxicating natural gifts we possess as humans is our ability to choose hope to lift us out of despair. “The Miracle Girl”—a fascinating and powerful debut literary novel by Andrew Roe—explores this theme. I was eager to read the book precisely because it deals with this intellectually tantalizing issue.
0コメント