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Aurelie Sheehan

Autor(a) de The Anxiety of Everyday Objects

7+ Works 379 Membros 12 Reviews

About the Author

Aurelie Sheehan is director of the creative writing program at the University of Arizona.

Inclui os nomes: AureliShehan, Aurelie Sheehan

Image credit: Photo by Martha Lochert

Obras de Aurelie Sheehan

History Lesson for Girls (2006) 148 cópias
Jack Kerouac Is Pregnant (1994) 22 cópias
Demigods on Speedway (2014) 5 cópias
Once into the Night (2019) 1 exemplar(es)
Fiction International 26: Beuyscout Shock Tales (1992) — Contribuinte — 1 exemplar(es)

Associated Works

xo Orpheus: Fifty New Myths (2013) — Contribuinte — 276 cópias
Fairy Tale Review: The Violet Issue (2008) — Contribuinte — 9 cópias

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Sexo
female

Membros

Resenhas

Quick read. captured my imagination
 
Marcado
lorespar | outras 6 resenhas | Jan 12, 2015 |
Winona Bartlett is a wannabe film-maker living in New York City. Although she doesn't own a camera, she spends lots of time imagining her first film, to be called "The Anxiety of Everyday Objects," a plotless piece that will illustrate the ways in which we continually misperceive the world around us, for example when we misread a sign that says "Turn ahead" as "Turn ahead." Yet while Winona's artistic aspirations run to the philosophical and ponderous, her day-to-day life is, well, predictably boring. She works as a secretary in a small law firm where she obsessed about making coffee that is just the right strength for her boss, she lives alone with her cat Fruit Bat, she is bossed around by her self-centered older sister, and she dates a series of unsuitable men. Things start to change when her firm hires Sandy Spires, a mysterious, sophisticated blind lawyer to help with a lawsuit they're working on. Sandy shakes up the firm, but in the end, and frankly as any even somewhat astute reader could have guessed--Sandy turns out not to be who she seems, and the revelation of this leads to a series of events that set Winona on a much more promising course. The book ends with the kind of explain-it-all scene one sees in TV detective shows, as where Monk exclaims "Here's what happened."

Meh!
… (mais)
 
Marcado
Pennydart | outras 4 resenhas | Aug 8, 2011 |
My favorite thing about the book was the title, but it was a sweet and easy read during a stressful week.
 
Marcado
eas311 | outras 4 resenhas | Jul 12, 2010 |
Story of two girls from wealthy Weston, Connecticut in 1976. Allison is 12, has scoliosis, wears a back brace 23 hours a day, and has just moved to Weston with her painter mom and poet/professor dad. Luckily she has her horse Jazz to keep her grounded. Kate is 12, rich, popular, and doesn't care much about anything except her horse Peach. The two girls find a connection in their love of riding, and become inseparable as girls often do. But Allison's back is not getting better, her parents start falling apart and doing stupid things--but Kate's family is much, much worse and the pain of it might just turn out to be too much to take. Well written, poignant, disturbing, and sad. A pretty great book.… (mais)
 
Marcado
eenerd | outras 6 resenhas | Jun 23, 2010 |

Listas

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Associated Authors

Sesshu Foster Contributor
John Noto Contributor
Steven Duplij Contributor
Rimma Gerlovina Contributor
Ted Grossman Contributor
Andrew Koopmans Contributor
Valery Gerlovin Contributor
Lynne Butler Oaks Contributor

Estatísticas

Obras
7
Also by
2
Membros
379
Popularidade
#63,709
Avaliação
½ 3.3
Resenhas
12
ISBNs
16

Tabelas & Gráficos