A Long Way From Home
von Kevin DeCosta
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Über das Buch
A week before he is set to stand trial, Mike Potter arrives in Detroit, a city struggling with a steady population decline and blighted by the abandoned properties he means to explore. Inside a derelict school, he meets Emily Atwood, who is squatting in her grandmother’s abandoned mansion in flight from her own past. Emily invites Mike to stay with her while he is “on vacation” and together they embrace the prospect of carefree exploring.
Soon, they meet a deeply disturbed preteen girl named Pol, a pyromaniac who has escaped an abusive home and has been living in and burning a series of abandoned houses. The complexity of Pol’s troubles unbeknownst to them, Mike and Emily decide to adopt her. Personal struggles, distressing memories, decisions looming on the horizon, a city’s perils, and one child’s turbulent behavior all threaten the security of the unconventional triumvirate.
Soon, they meet a deeply disturbed preteen girl named Pol, a pyromaniac who has escaped an abusive home and has been living in and burning a series of abandoned houses. The complexity of Pol’s troubles unbeknownst to them, Mike and Emily decide to adopt her. Personal struggles, distressing memories, decisions looming on the horizon, a city’s perils, and one child’s turbulent behavior all threaten the security of the unconventional triumvirate.
Eigenschaften und Details
- Hauptkategorie: Literatur & Fiktion
- Weitere Kategorien Sport / Abenteuer
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Projektoption: 15×23 cm
Seitenanzahl: 278 -
ISBN
- Hardcover mit Schutzumschlag: 9781034291626
- Bedrucktes Hardcover: 9781034291602
- Softcover: 9781034291619
- Veröffentlichungsdatum: Jan. 18, 2021
- Sprache English
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Über den Autor
Since February 3, 2012, I have been exploring, photographing and documenting abandoned locations. Most of my exploits take place in the state of Ohio but I have also traveled to other states including Michigan, Indiana, Pennsylvania, New York and Virginia. I feel that it is a shame to allow buildings to fall into disrepair and eventually cease to exist without properly documenting their histories. Capturing them in an abandoned state also provides the opportunity to show how man-made structures withstand nature and other factors once man no longer has use for them.