Bright lights flicker in the dark evenings of summer.
Pinpoints of hope float against the black descent of
night. The sweetest of small and innocent creatures
finds its way through the shadows. Fireflies seem to
dance on sheer air, illuminating the space between
heartbeats. Children give off a similar brave glow,
despite the challenges of their young lives. The lessons
of childhood are often painful, the shedding of fragile
wings in the gloam of an uncertain future. These rich
novellas are small jewels reflecting the essence of what
it means to grow up dancing among the shadows of life,
carrying a brave, small beacon because you know that
even the brightest days always, always, end in darkness.
Childhood can be so sweetly sad and sadly sweet,
profound and deceptively easy to categorize, yet
poignant to remember. New York Times bestselling
novelist Sarah Addison Allen (GARDEN SPELLS, SUGAR
QUEEN, THE PEACH KEEPER) anchors THE FIREFLY DANCE with
her wistful and funny novella about Louise, a North
Carolina girl whose keen observations of the lives
around her weaves an unforgettable spell with just a
hint of everyday magic. Phyllis Schieber's Sonya, a
child of Holocaust survivors, is confronted with the
responsibilities of her legacy when she has a poignant
encounter with a classmate, another child of survivors,
and her mother, in a local shop in their 1970's New York
neighborhood. Kathryn Magendie's Petey deals wryly with
her family's move from the cool blue mountains of North
Carolina to the hot flatlands of Texas. Augusta
Trobaugh's stoic Georgia girl leads us through her
surreal encounter with a mysterious backwoods toddler
who turns out to be anything but ordinary. |
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