Check out the latest book in the Unraveling History series!
Kim is six years old and lives in the fabulous Circus Tatxim-tatxam. He is so shy that he thinks the day he goes on the circus ring he will just melt like strawberry ice cream in the summer heat.
In the texts collected in Eduardo Halfon’s new book, parenthood –with its high and low points– is often the lens through which the author revisits some of the favorite themes of his literary world.
After Paul Stoneheart's death, Jamie finds a stack of letters that seem to have been read over and over again. The sender is Paul's mother, whom Paul never talked about. Under the impression that she is dead, Jamie reads the letters.
A picture book to help the little ones understand why daddy and mummy are not together anymore. Separated? What’s that? The smiley, little character at the centre of this story is trying to understand why mummy and daddy don’t live together.
Mar is a little girl who recently lived through the loss of a loved one with whom she had a very close relationship.
One day, the wind finds a lost letter. The rain has washed away the writing on the envelope and it’s impossible to tell who it’s for or who wrote it. But the letter is full of the most beautiful words: ‘ I love you’.
Dulce has butterfly ears, as delicate as they are closed. She has eyes made of taffeta and a lovely, but silent smile. Sometimes Dulce feels afraid, or nervous, or sad. But her friends are here to help.
Gusti is a little house that can travel from one place to the next. All you have to do is take up the anchors holding the house to the ground, put it on a lorry, and get moving.
A coming-of-age novel set in the summer before senior school and constructed on foundations of friendship and family. The waves came towards us slow, elastic, manageable.
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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