22,99 €
inkl. MwSt.

Versandfertig in 1-2 Wochen
  • Broschiertes Buch

Set in the expansive, ever changing North American continent 45 years from now, Wolfe lives in a society where blue-eyed people are regarded as lazy, vulgar, prone to violence, and weaker than the superior brown-eyed majority. In an effort to change his dire situation as a worker in the arid Californian hills, he is purchased and brought to the Bredenbury Plantation where a plan brews that could change the fate of millions. Miguel A. Fenrich has managed to encapsulate the horror of inhumanity in a single, brazen, unwavering novel. Be one of the first to read the soon to be controversial novel…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Set in the expansive, ever changing North American continent 45 years from now, Wolfe lives in a society where blue-eyed people are regarded as lazy, vulgar, prone to violence, and weaker than the superior brown-eyed majority. In an effort to change his dire situation as a worker in the arid Californian hills, he is purchased and brought to the Bredenbury Plantation where a plan brews that could change the fate of millions. Miguel A. Fenrich has managed to encapsulate the horror of inhumanity in a single, brazen, unwavering novel. Be one of the first to read the soon to be controversial novel that will have you wondering what would you do if your humanity was tied to a single, immutable trait?
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Autorenporträt
Miguel A. Fenrich (he/him) is a nationally recognized Sudanese-Canadian storyteller, photographer, and journalist earning awards for his work provincially and nationally. He is the owner of northwest Saskatchewan's leading genre fiction publishing company, Supernova Press, for which he received a QEII Platinum Jubilee Medal. Fenrich tackles thought-provoking themes in his fiction, such as white supremacy, class consciousness, feminism, and issues facing the LGBTQ2S+ community. Recently, he's been exploring the world of poetry as a way of addressing society's challenges and has written two novels, Blue and What Lies in the Valley.He is currently writing his third novel and is exploring photography as a way to uncover his relationship with settler Saskatchewan, his heritage, and the Canadian Prairies.