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Miranda Miller

    This author delves into the complexities of the human experience through her novels and short stories. Her work often explores themes of identity, migration, and cultural encounters, reflecting her own extensive international background. Through carefully drawn characters and insightful observations, she offers a unique perspective on social and psychological landscapes. Her literary style is characterized by depth and empathy, drawing readers into thoughtful narratives.

    Smiles und das neue Jahrtausend. Roman.
    Angelica, Paintress of Minds
    Loving Mephistopheles
    • 2020

      Angelica, Paintress of Minds

      • 294 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      Angelica Kaufman is so successful that when she comes to England as a young woman in 1766 a word is coined: Angelicamad. This sparky, true life novel tells the life story of a woman who battled misogyny to become one of the greatest artists of the Enlightenment Period. After fifteen triumphant years in London, she flees to Italy following the anti-Catholic Gordon Riots. In Rome, as an old lady, a lively young artist and model names Lucia is Angelica's guest. And she's pregnant, ridded with the scandal Angelica has been trying to avoid all her life. She is the girl I trained myself not to be. Men can do as they like, but women risk losing everything. In her studio, Angelica relives her journey from a poor background to international fame. She paints her friends (Antonio Canova, Germaine de Stael, Emma Hamilton and Goethe among others) and draws us into her fascinating past. Angelica, Paintress of Minds tells of a gifted and powerful woman with a kind heart.

      Angelica, Paintress of Minds
    • 2007

      Loving Mephistopheles

      • 300 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      Set in 1920s London, the story follows Jenny, a music-hall singer who unwittingly makes a pact with the Devil, Leo, granting her eternal youth. As Leo, with his myriad past lives, thrives, Jenny struggles with the burdens of her agelessness, facing scrutiny and the necessity of constant reinvention. The arrival of a daughter, potentially not Leo's, intensifies their tumultuous relationship, leading Jenny to flee and sever ties with Leo. Ultimately, Leo realizes that Jenny is the only woman he has ever truly loved.

      Loving Mephistopheles