Uncivil Seasons

Capa
Simon and Schuster, 1993 - 320 páginas
With striking humor and a rich range of characters, Malone creates a landscape struggling the New South's high-tech lifestyles and the Old South's inherited codes.

The Polite Piedmont town of Hillston, North Carolina, wants to go on believing it is too temperate to require homicide experts. So begins the plot of Uncivil Seasons an unforgettable novel from Michael Malone.
 

Índice

Secção 1_
19
Secção 2_
30
Secção 3_
43
Secção 4_
54
Secção 5_
58
Secção 6_
81
Secção 7_
88
Secção 8_
101
Secção 15_
179
Secção 16_
202
Secção 17_
209
Secção 18_
217
Secção 19_
223
Secção 20_
232
Secção 21_
252
Secção 22_
262

Secção 9_
111
Secção 10_
115
Secção 11_
121
Secção 12_
138
Secção 13_
144
Secção 14_
150
Secção 23_
268
Secção 24_
277
Secção 25_
282
Secção 26_
291
Secção 27_
295
Direitos de autor

Outras edições - Ver tudo

Palavras e frases frequentes

Acerca do autor (1993)

Michael Christopher Malone, Novelist and TV writer, was born in 1942 in Durham, North Carolina. He studied English at the University of North Carolina, graduating in 1964. He earned his master's degree two years later. He went on to attend Harvard University, working toward a doctorate in English, but dropped out before finishing. He wrote for the ABC daytime drama, One Life to Live (1991-1996). His first book was Painting the Roses Red (1975). Some of his other novels were Handling Sin (1983), Foolscap (1991), First Lady (2002), and The Killing Club (2005) written with Marcie Walsh, based on a story by Josh Griffith. His awards include a Writers Guild of America Award for Television: Daytime Serials (1992) for One Life to Live; a Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series Writing Team (1994) - One Life to Live; and an Edgar Award for Best Short Story (1997) - Red Clay. Michael Malone died on August 19, 2022 in Clinton, Connecticut.

Informação bibliográfica