Sketches from the Spanish Mustang

Fiction & Literature, Drama, Nonfiction, Entertainment, Literary
Cover of the book Sketches from the Spanish Mustang by Benjamin X. Wretlind, Benjamin X. Wretlind
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Benjamin X. Wretlind ISBN: 9781476169163
Publisher: Benjamin X. Wretlind Publication: June 19, 2012
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Benjamin X. Wretlind
ISBN: 9781476169163
Publisher: Benjamin X. Wretlind
Publication: June 19, 2012
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

An artist sits at a table in a casino in Cripple Creek, Colorado. She is broken, alone, and she is waiting. She's waiting for redemption, waiting for a chance to prove she can really see through someone else's eyes. And as she waits, she sketches those around her, those who keep their secrets buried deep. It's not simply something she wants to do; it's something she has to do, and it might just save a life.

While all people have secrets, the artist quickly learns that some of them are every bit as dark as her own. There is the immigrant looking for fortune and finding death along the way. There is the woman running for her life, desperate to hide in a small town that is, for its own sake, trying to live again. There is the angry man, jilted by his now-dead wife, looking for revenge. There is the veteran who can't remember, the woman about to lose her mother, and the drunk who doesn't want to be what people see on the outside. There are more people, everywhere, behind every turn of the card, and all of them have secrets.

Sketches from the Spanish Mustang weaves each person's story--both intriguing and magical--into a single narrative about love, death, penance and peace. As the mystery of the woman's sketches unfolds, the lives of her subjects unravel with it. This is the artist's gift: to uncover the hidden in life. Yet gifts can be curses, and curses can be secrets. For the artist, remembering is penance. Through the eyes of the woman who is forced to spend her life attempting to correct her own misguided view of those around her, the reader is given an opportunity to see more than the vagrant, more than the alcoholic, more than the immigrant or the woman running from her past. The novel breaks down stereotypes and allows the reader to peer into the eyes of the people we all turn away from.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

An artist sits at a table in a casino in Cripple Creek, Colorado. She is broken, alone, and she is waiting. She's waiting for redemption, waiting for a chance to prove she can really see through someone else's eyes. And as she waits, she sketches those around her, those who keep their secrets buried deep. It's not simply something she wants to do; it's something she has to do, and it might just save a life.

While all people have secrets, the artist quickly learns that some of them are every bit as dark as her own. There is the immigrant looking for fortune and finding death along the way. There is the woman running for her life, desperate to hide in a small town that is, for its own sake, trying to live again. There is the angry man, jilted by his now-dead wife, looking for revenge. There is the veteran who can't remember, the woman about to lose her mother, and the drunk who doesn't want to be what people see on the outside. There are more people, everywhere, behind every turn of the card, and all of them have secrets.

Sketches from the Spanish Mustang weaves each person's story--both intriguing and magical--into a single narrative about love, death, penance and peace. As the mystery of the woman's sketches unfolds, the lives of her subjects unravel with it. This is the artist's gift: to uncover the hidden in life. Yet gifts can be curses, and curses can be secrets. For the artist, remembering is penance. Through the eyes of the woman who is forced to spend her life attempting to correct her own misguided view of those around her, the reader is given an opportunity to see more than the vagrant, more than the alcoholic, more than the immigrant or the woman running from her past. The novel breaks down stereotypes and allows the reader to peer into the eyes of the people we all turn away from.

More books from Literary

Cover of the book The Island of the Day Before by Benjamin X. Wretlind
Cover of the book Viagens na minha terra by Benjamin X. Wretlind
Cover of the book Flying over 96th Street by Benjamin X. Wretlind
Cover of the book I'm a Stranger Here Myself by Benjamin X. Wretlind
Cover of the book America's Disaster Culture by Benjamin X. Wretlind
Cover of the book Medbh McGuckian by Benjamin X. Wretlind
Cover of the book Snapper by Benjamin X. Wretlind
Cover of the book To Say Nothing of the Dog by Benjamin X. Wretlind
Cover of the book The Mistress of Husaby by Benjamin X. Wretlind
Cover of the book Singing Dante: The Literary Origins of Cinquecento Monody by Benjamin X. Wretlind
Cover of the book Other Globes by Benjamin X. Wretlind
Cover of the book Aldous Huxley's Island: A True Utopia? by Benjamin X. Wretlind
Cover of the book Nord et Est du Sri Lanka by Benjamin X. Wretlind
Cover of the book The Candy Men by Benjamin X. Wretlind
Cover of the book Koryphäen by Benjamin X. Wretlind
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy