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Michelle Barker

    This author delves into the complexities of the human experience, exploring themes of identity and personal growth through compelling narratives. Her prose is marked by its ability to evoke strong emotions and create vivid, immersive worlds for readers. The author excels at capturing the nuances of relationships and internal struggles, offering readers a profound and thought-provoking literary journey. Her work stands as a testament to the power of language and its capacity to illuminate both our outward journeys and our inner landscapes.

    Pulp Literature Spring 2018: Issue 18
    My Long List of Impossible Things
    • My Long List of Impossible Things

      • 360 pages
      • 13 hours of reading

      A brilliant historical YA that asks: how do you choose between survival and doing the right thing? The arrival of the Soviet army in Germany at the end of World War II sends sixteen-year-old Katja and her family into turmoil. The fighting has stopped, but German society is in collapse, resulting in tremendous hardship. With their father gone and few resources available to them, Katja and her sister are forced to flee their home, reassured by their mother that if they can just reach a distant friend in a town far away, things will get better. But their harrowing journey brings danger and violence, and Katja needs to summon all her strength to build a new life, just as she's questioning everything she thought she knew about her country. Katja's bravery and defiance help her deal with the emotional and societal upheaval. But how can she stay true to herself and protect the people she loves when each decision has such far-reaching consequences? Acclaimed writer Michelle Barker's second novel explores the chaos and destruction of the Second World War from a perspective rarely examined in YA fiction--the implications of the Soviet occupation on a German population grappling with the horrors of Nazism and its aftermath.

      My Long List of Impossible Things
    • Pulp Literature Spring 2018: Issue 18

      • 214 pages
      • 8 hours of reading

      Travel from the daily commute to out of this world with Genni Gunn, Sophie Panzer, and Jessica Barksdale; take the trip from dead to living and back again in 'We Come Back Different' by AJ Odasso and 'Bone Dry' by Roy Gray and Ben Baldwin; see differently with poetry by Susan Alexander and Angela Rebrec; enjoy the return of Stella Ryman and Allaigna as well as your quarterly shot of short sharp fiction from Susan Pieters. All this plus the winners of the Raven Short Story Contest and the SiWC Storytellers' Award.

      Pulp Literature Spring 2018: Issue 18