The Lucky Ones
On the off chance that you have an escalated stop

Deep. Understanding. Tenderness. And full of very quiet moments of Kaixa.

That is what you can see in “Parallel coordinates” – a special re-edition of “5 time zones, 10 hours of flight time and a self-contained eyelash”.

With a completely new look with a “strange” idea from the editorial Bloom Books, The parallel coordinates will send you a reminder of a strong bond, through space and time in between. past and present, between Paris and Hanoi – two “resident coordinates” associated with the author Kaixa.

“One can do so many things with the iron and blue chair in the Tuileries Garden. Sit up and read, watch the sky, watch the people, watch the ducks swim in the fountains, the long lines in front of the Amorino ice cream vans, in front of the Musée de l’Orangerie and the Jeu de Center Paume, or shoots a couple whispering on another nearby chair.

Publisher

Thelab Books

5 reviews for The Lucky Ones

  1. August 16, 2021
    Reply

    Teenage angst in the face of a terrible parental marriage is beautifully rendered in this tale of 15-year-old Maisie.

  2. August 16, 2021
    Reply

    Teenage angst in the face of a terrible parental marriage is beautifully rendered in this tale of 15-year-old Maisie.

  3. August 16, 2021
    Reply

    Teenage angst in the face of a terrible parental marriage is beautifully rendered in this tale of 15-year-old Maisie.

  4. August 16, 2021
    Reply

    Teenage angst in the face of a terrible parental marriage is beautifully rendered in this tale of 15-year-old Maisie.

  5. August 16, 2021
    Reply

    Teenage angst in the face of a terrible parental marriage is beautifully rendered in this tale of 15-year-old Maisie.

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Mario James

Author 03 Published Books

"My books are marked down because most of them are marked with a on the edge by publishers."

Biography
Robbins was born Harold Rubin in New York City, the son of Frances "Fannie" Smith and Charles Rubin. His parents were well-educated Jewish emigrants from the Russian Empire, his father from Odessa and his mother from Neshwies (Nyasvizh), south of Minsk. Robbins later falsely claimed to be a Jewish orphan who had been raised in a Catholic boys' home. Instead he was raised by his father, a pharmacist, and his stepmother, Blanche, in Brooklyn.

Robbins dropped out of high school in the late 1920s to work in a variety of jobs, including errand boy, bookies' runner, and inventory clerk in a grocer's. He was employed by Universal Pictures from 1940 to 1957, starting off as a clerk and rising to an executive.

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