![]() Lidia Yuknavitch, The Chronology of Water. It’s all a series of fragments and repetitions and pattern formations. Events don’t have cause and effect relationships the way you wish they did. In a war-torn village in Eastern Europe, an American photographer captures a heart-stopping image: a young. Hated the use of arcane vocabulary by the author as a way of showing off. Yuknavitch’s novel is disturbing and challenging, but undoubtedly leaves its mark. Your life doesn’t happen in any kind of order. Author(s): Dr Lidia Yuknavitch General Fiction. Appreciated the emotional background of 'The Small Backs of Children' by Lidia Yuknavitch. The writer’s best friend, a poet, believes she can help the writer she enters the war zone to bring the orphaned girl to the United States. Meanwhile, an American writer who is friends with the photographer, is hospitalized with severe depression. ![]() ![]() The girl escapes into the woods, making her way to a widow’s home the widow teaches her about art, and the girl begins to paint. Written in the voices of characters without first names-photographer, writer, poet, performance artist, playwright, filmmaker, and painter-the novel begins in modern Eastern Europe (likely Lithuania), occupied by an unseen force, where a photojournalist captures an award-winning shot: a young girl running from her exploding home, in which the rest of her family dies. ![]() In this daring novel, Yuknavitch ( The Chronology of Water) takes a provocative look at the intimate relationship among love, art, and sex in a group of emotionally scarred artists who want to save one of their own. ![]()
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