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Scott O'Connor

    Scott O'Connor gestaltet Erzählungen, die sich mit tiefgreifenden menschlichen Zuständen und der Komplexität von Beziehungen auseinandersetzen. Seine Prosa zeichnet sich durch scharfen psychologischen Einblick und einen unverwechselbaren Stil aus, der den Leser in ein reiches Geflecht aus Emotionen und Gedanken eintauchen lässt. Der Autor verwebt gekonnt fesselnde Handlungsstränge mit existenziellen Fragen, sodass seine Werke einen bleibenden Eindruck hinterlassen. Sein Schreiben offenbart eine einzigartige Fähigkeit, verborgene Wahrheiten über die menschliche Natur aufzudecken.

    Zero Zone
    Untouchable
    • Untouchable

      • 381 Seiten
      • 14 Lesestunden
      3,8(32)Abgeben

      It is the autumn of 1999. A year has passed since Lucy Darby's unexpected death, leaving her husband David and son Whitley to mend the gaping hole in their lives. David, a trauma-site cleanup technician, spends his nights expunging the violent remains of strangers, helping their families to move on, though he is unable to do the same. Whitley--an 11-year-old social pariah known simply as The Kid--hasn't spoken since his mother's death. Instead, he communicates through a growing collection of notebooks, living in a safer world of his own silent imagining.As the impending arrival of Y2K casts a shadow of uncertainty around them, their own precarious reality begins to implode. Questions pertaining to the events of Lucy's death begin to haunt David, while The Kid, who still believes his mother is alive, enlists the help of his small group of misfit friends to bring her back. As David continues to lose his grip on reality and The Kid's sense of urgency grows, they begin to uncover truths that will force them to confront their deepest fears about each other and the wounded family they are trying desperately to save.

      Untouchable
    • Zero Zone

      • 320 Seiten
      • 12 Lesestunden
      3,6(200)Abgeben

      A literary thriller about an infamous desert art installation, the cult it inspired, and the search for a missing young woman that is “cinematic . . . readers will be compelled to start again at page one to discover how O’Connor pieces together his suspenseful, incredibly well–written narrative” (Library Journal, starred review). Los Angeles, the late 1970s: Jess Shepard is an installation artist who creates environments that focus on light and space, often leading to intense sensory experiences for visitors to her work. A run of critically lauded projects peaks with Zero Zone, an installation at the once upon a time site of nuclear bomb testing in the New Mexico desert. But when a small group of travelers experience what they perceive as a religious awakening inside Zero Zone, they barricade themselves in the installation until authorities are forced to intervene. That violent showdown becomes a media sensation, and its aftermath follows Jess wherever she goes. Devastated by the attack and the distortion of her art, Jess retreats from the world. Unable to work, Jess unravels mentally and emotionally, plagued by a nagging uncertainty as to her culpability for what happened. Three years later, a survivor from Zero Zone comes looking for Jess, who must move past her self imposed isolation to face down her fears and recover her art and possibly her life from a violent cult intent of making it their own.

      Zero Zone