JeanbaptisteUOMO's Reading List
3 stories
Colegio Zombie by CarmonaL
CarmonaL
  • WpView
    Reads 394,289
  • WpVote
    Votes 6,178
  • WpPart
    Parts 35
LEE EL COMIC EN : https://www.facebook.com/ColegioZombieEbook Un Chico de 15 años ... Un Evento Apocalíptico ... Un Colegio... Y Una Historia que Contar... Esto narra la historia de Luis Un Chico de 15 años que por cuestiones Adversas completamente a el Termina Encerrado en su colegio sin poder salir , con pocos recursos y Media Ciudad queriendo Devorarlo ... El tiempo pasa... Logra salir del colegio se une a un grupo y Olvida a sus compañeros para Escribir su propia historia... Luego de unos meses Se entera de que su familia sigue con vida Y Tiene que rescatarla... Con situaciones Donde Tendrá que tomar Decisiones De vida o muerte para el Y Para sus compañeros... Esto solo marca El comienzo de Su historia...
Il diario di uno zombie (work in progres) by LzMitc
LzMitc
  • WpView
    Reads 3,403
  • WpVote
    Votes 62
  • WpPart
    Parts 7
"I corpi dei morti di E-52 si rialzano e attaccano gli scienziati dei laboratori" lesse Laila sul foglio del giornale prima di accenderci il fuoco. Un'apocalisse di zombie fotofobici descritta dal diario di Laila Cooper. Vi prego di scrivere nei commenti ciò che pensate dei vari capitoli, o della storia in generale
Once More to the River: Family Snapshots of Growing Up, Getting Out & Going Back by erasmoguerra
erasmoguerra
  • WpView
    Reads 62,260
  • WpVote
    Votes 672
  • WpPart
    Parts 6
“Like the howl of an accordion—half sorrow and half joy, wondrous and exquisite—these stories squeezed my heart.” —Sandra Cisneros, author of "The House on Mango Street" * In "Once More to the River," Erasmo Guerra writes a moving account of his boyhood on the Texas-Mexico border. An award-winning novelist and journalist, Guerra explores present-day political and cultural realities, and recounts the shattering loss his family suffered when his teenage sister was murdered. Told with lyrical prose and a reporter’s ear for the “Tex-Mex” language of the region, these stories capture the voices of South Texas. By turns humorous and haunting, powerful and tender, this collection is an intensely personal chronicle of tragedy and the triumph of survival.