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The reference book by one of the most prominent international figures in the field of nature writing, as well as one of the great current prose writers of the American West. Pete Fromm has lived comfortably with his family for years in the quiet town of Great Falls, Montana. At first it was difficult for him to change his uniform as a ranger - in which he had lived so many adventures in the "Great American Wilderness" - for that of a family man, but the inexhaustible love he feels for his two children and the new experiences he shares every day with those little savages they ended up tipping…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The reference book by one of the most prominent international figures in the field of nature writing, as well as one of the great current prose writers of the American West. Pete Fromm has lived comfortably with his family for years in the quiet town of Great Falls, Montana. At first it was difficult for him to change his uniform as a ranger - in which he had lived so many adventures in the "Great American Wilderness" - for that of a family man, but the inexhaustible love he feels for his two children and the new experiences he shares every day with those little savages they ended up tipping the balance. He assumed that the days of him running away from grizzlies and his nights in the open cold and ecstatic under the stars were a thing of the past. And it was good that it was like that, after all, we all have to mature and put aside certain things...
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Autorenporträt
Mariana Enriquez nació en 1973 en Buenos Aires, Argentina, donde vive. Es licenciada en Periodismo y Comunicación Social, subeditora del suplemento Radar del diario Página/12 y docente de periodismo narrativo en la Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Publicó las novelas Bajar es lo peor (1995 y 2013), Cómo desaparecer completamente (2004) y Este es el mar (2017), las colecciones de cuentos Los peligros de fumar en la cama (2009 y 2017) y Las cosas que perdimos en el fuego (2016), la nouvelle Chicos que vuelven (2010), los relatos de viajes Alguien camina sobre tu tumba. Mis viajes a cementerios (2013), el perfil La hermana menor. Un retrato de Silvina Ocampo (2014 y 2018). Su libro, Las cosas que perdimos en el fuego fue traducido a veintidós idiomas, recibió el premio Ciutat de Barcelona a mejor obra en lengua castellana en 2016 y el 3.° Premio Nacional de Literatura por relato corto en Argentina, 2018. Ha publicado relatos en medios como The New Yorker, Granta, Freeman's y Electric Literature. Helia Toledo (Madrid, 1994) estudió Comunicación Audiovisual. Tras distintos trabajos de escenografía y animación, su vocación se va reorientando hacia el dibujo, e ingresa en la Escuela de Arte 10 de Madrid, donde estudia Ilustración. Desde entonces, su trabajo se centra en dicho campo, la pintura y el diseño. Este libro es su primer proyecto individual de cuento ilustrado.