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Elizabeth Stuckey-French

    Elizabeth Stuckey-French crafts narratives that delve into the intricacies of human connection and the art of storytelling. Her work is marked by a keen insight into the subtleties of the human psyche, often weaving in elements of magical realism and unexpected turns. Through her short stories and novels, she invites readers into worlds where reality bends with imagination, exploring themes of identity, memory, and the search for meaning. Her prose is skillfully wrought and evocative, establishing her as a distinctive and captivating voice in contemporary literature.

    Descend Again
    • "Millie Delaney, though she was liked and accepted by the people of the remote Arizona town in which she lived, was oddly isolated and set apart from them - set apart by her temperament, by her family background and by the width and scope of her intellectual and moral horizons. Suddenly into the small calm world she had built for herself two people erupted with shattering effect - Miguel, the Mexican boy she taught at school and who was perhaps an embryonic literary genius; and Toad, the tall, fair stranger from beyond the mountains. Miss Burroway portrays, with immense skill, delicacy and perception, the explosions they caused and their devastating aftermaths. Janet Burroway, born in 1936, spent three years at Columbia before coming to Cambridge in 1958 to read English Literature. She has already published poems and short stories in various magazines and anthologies both here and in the United States[,] but 'Descend Again' is her first novel." [from the front flap]

      Descend Again