Can you imagine a monster who’s afraid of wolves, bears, birds, pixies, and toads; boys and girls, princesses, old people, dogs and cats who gets expelled from the room of a bad-tempered little boy?
If you were lucky enough to cross it, you would leave the sea behind you. In front of you, thousands of shops, filth, monotony, and sadness. Every day is the same as every other… Until one day everything changes.
The main character in this crime thriller is sixteen-year-old Samuel. After a series of family dramas, Samuel ends up temporarily living with his uncle Juan Domingo who runs a detective agency.
These poems introduce children to Eastern poetry, particularly the popular haiku, a sort of poem that tries to channel Nature through the impression it makes on our senses.
Lucila feels different because of the way she looks: she has shaved her head, has loads of ear-piercings and wears masculine clothes. She lives with her two siblings and her father.
Wouldn’t it be fantastic if we could find everything we ever lost? In 1995, a little girl lost her left-hand glove.
One day just like any other, Milo feeds at his mum’s breast. But with all that guzzling he ends up swallowing his mum! Of course, he misses her and decides to go look for her.
Love and death are similar, almost as though they were siblings. They differ in appearance, but they live together.
“Is the story of our lives printed on our foreheads? Right from the very start? In my case, it’s easy to find out; a visit to the Sagrada Familia and I found out […] Where do I need to go? To the façade that depicts the Nativity, of course.
Having decided to distance himself from the circus ring and his father, Mateo Salerno, the last in a long line of circus performers, tries to do his duty in compili
Lily Meyer is a writer, translator, and critic. Her translations include Claudia Ulloa Donoso’s story collections Little Bird and Ice for Martians. Her ...
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