Crawfish Dreams

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Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, 2007 M12 18 - 368 páginas
For forty years Camille Broussard has cooked for other people. As a young bride she moved from Louisiana to Los Angeles and settled in the thriving community of Watts; but many of her hopes went up in the flames of the 1965 riots. Now it’s 1984--and she’s determined to cook for herself. She’ll pickle okra, sell meatpies at church, peddle pralines--whatever it takes to revive her scattered family, her neighborhood, and herself. Her grandson Nicholas has just been released from prison and takes up residence in her backyard, and her sons want her to move away. But with support from her talented if unemployed neighbor Lester Pep and her eager but hapless lesbian daughter Grace, she tries to start a business. By serving up recipes from her childhood, she hopes to rekindle her crawfish dreams.

Gracefully written, with a wonderful sense of humor, Crawfish Dreams is a high-spirited novel about family, responsibility, and the pursuit of personal happiness.
 

Contenido

Sección 1
3
Sección 2
23
Sección 3
34
Sección 4
46
Sección 5
54
Sección 6
65
Sección 7
71
Sección 8
81
Sección 13
159
Sección 14
168
Sección 15
181
Sección 16
190
Sección 17
197
Sección 18
215
Sección 19
250
Sección 20
265

Sección 9
92
Sección 10
115
Sección 11
135
Sección 12
150
Sección 21
275
Sección 22
324
Sección 23
357
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Acerca del autor (2007)

Nancy Rawles is a novelist and playwright who grew up in Los Angeles and began her career as a professional writer in Chicago. Her first novel, Love Like Gumbo, was awarded the 1998 American Book Award and Washington State’s Governor’s Writers Award, and her plays have been produced in Chicago, San Francisco, Minneapolis, St. Louis, Los Angeles, and Seattle. She lives and teaches creative writing in Seattle.

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