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Description
Sujets
Informations
Publié par | Everest Media LLC |
Date de parution | 21 septembre 2022 |
Nombre de lectures | 0 |
EAN13 | 9798350030815 |
Langue | English |
Poids de l'ouvrage | 1 Mo |
Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0200€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.
Extrait
Insights on Ivan Doig's This House of Sky
Contents Insights from Chapter 1 Insights from Chapter 2 Insights from Chapter 3 Insights from Chapter 4 Insights from Chapter 5 Insights from Chapter 6 Insights from Chapter 7
Insights from Chapter 1
#1
My mother and father lived a herding life in Montana, with no people in sight. The only sound was the water flowing down Sixteenmile Creek.
#2
My parents were herding cattle in Montana when they met. They married, and my father left his previous life to join my mother in her new one. But he soon got sick and died young.
#3
When I was six, my mother passed away from asthma. My father and I moved on to the next chapter of our lives, but the start of my memory is June 27, 1945.
Insights from Chapter 2
#1
When I was six, my mother died from asthma. I moved with my father to the next chapter of my life, but the loss of my mother mourned hard in me.
#2
I was unable to read until I was six, when my mother passed away from asthma. I moved with my father to the next chapter of my life, but the loss of my mother mourned hard in me.
#3
My father died when I was six, and I was unable to read until I was six, when my mother passed away from asthma. I moved with my father to the next chapter of my life, but the loss of my mother mourned hard in me.
#4
I was unable to read until I was six when my mother died from asthma. I moved with my father to the next chapter of my life, but the loss of my mother mourned hard in me.
#5
My parents died young, and I was unable to read until I was six when my mother died from asthma. I moved with my father to the next chapter of my life, but the loss of my mother mourned hard in me.
#6
The settlers of the Smith River Valley were not just moving into the mountains or back to the valley lowland. They were moving between high country and higher, and the weather is rapidly uglier and more dangerous the higher you go.
#7
The settlers of the Smith River Valley were not just moving into the mountains or back to the valley lowland. They were moving between high country and higher, and the weather is rapidly uglier and more dangerous the higher you go.
#8
My father died when I was six, and I was unable to read until I was six, when my mother passed away from asthma. I moved with my father to the next chapter of my life, but the loss of my mother mourned hard in me.
#9
My father died when I was six, and I was unable to read until I was six when my mother died from asthma. I moved with my father to the next chapter of my life, but the loss of my mother mourned hard in me.
#10
The settlers of the Smith River Valley were not just moving into the mountains or back to the valley lowland. They were moving between high country and higher, and the weather is rapidly uglier and more dangerous the higher you go.
#11
The Doigs were not just moving into the mountains or back to the valley lowland. They were moving between high country and higher, and the weather is rapidly uglier and more dangerous the higher you go.
#12
Charlie Doig was not just moving into the mountains or back to the valley lowland, but between high country and higher, and the weather is rapidly uglier and more dangerous the higher you go.
#13
My father, Charlie Doig, was a settler of the Smith River Valley. He died when I was six, and I was unable to read until I was six, when my mother died from asthma. I moved with my father to the next chapter of my life, but the loss of my mother mourned hard in me.
#14
My father, Charlie Doig, was a settler of the Smith River Valley. He died when I was six, and I was unable to read until I was six, when my mother died from asthma. I moved with my father to the next chapter of my life, but the loss of my mother mourned hard in me.
#15
The author's father, Charlie Doig, was a settler of the Smith River Valley. He died when the author was six, and he was unable to read until he was six, when his mother died from asthma. The author and his brother went to Chicago to visit their cousin's boxcars of cattle, but they were caught by a policeman and sent back to Montana.
#16
The author's father, Charlie Doig, was a settler of the Smith River Valley. He died when the author was six, and he was unable to read until he was six, when his mother died from asthma. The author and his brother went to Chicago to visit their cousin's boxcars of cattle, but they were caught by a policeman and sent back to Montana.
#17
Charlie Doig, the author, was a settler of the Smith River Valley. He died when the author was six, and he was unable to read until he was six, when his mother died from asthma. He and his brother went to Chicago to visit their cousin's boxcars of cattle, but they were caught by a policeman and sent back to Montana.
#18
The author's father, Charlie Doig, was a settler of the Smith River Valley. He died when the author was six, and he was unable to read until he was six, when his mother died from asthma. The author and his brother went to Chicago to visit their cousin's boxcars of cattle, but they were caught by a policeman and sent back to Montana.
#19
The author's father, Charlie Doig, was a settler of the Smith River Valley.