Funny, thrilling, romantic and spellbound. This sequel to An Acute Attraction, will have you hooked! When the voluptuous and curvaceous, Isabel Chambers decided to take a child-free week away to Cambridge; never in a million years did she think she would meet the 'God of a man', Marc Chambers, Pro
Attraction
โ Scribed by Porter, Ruby
- Book ID
- 110537280
- Publisher
- The Text Publishing Company
- Year
- 2019
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 365 KB
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The present reckons with the past in Attraction , Ruby Porter's atmospheric debut novel.
Three women are on a road trip, navigating the motorways of the North Island, their relationships with one another and New Zealand's colonial history. Our narrator doesn't know where she stands with Ilana, her not-quite girlfriend. She has a complex history with her best friend, Ashi. She's haunted by the memory of her emotionally abusive ex-boyfriend. And her period's now weeks late.
Attraction is a meditative novel of connection, inheritance and the stories we tell ourselves. In lyrical fragments, Porter explores what it means to be and to belong, to create and to destroy.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The present reckons with the past in _Attraction_ , Ruby Porter's atmospheric debut novel. Three women are on a road trip, navigating the motorways of the North Island, their relationships with one another and New Zealand's colonial history. Our narrator doesn't know where she stands with Ilana, he
The present reckons with the past in _Attraction_ , Ruby Porter's atmospheric debut novel. Three women are on a road trip, navigating the motorways of the North Island, their relationships with one another and New Zealand's colonial history. Our narrator doesn't know where she stands with Ilana, he
The present reckons with the past in _Attraction_ , Ruby Porter's atmospheric debut novel. Three women are on a road trip, navigating the motorways of the North Island, their relationships with one another and New Zealand's colonial history. Our narrator doesn't know where she stands with Ilana, he