The Rabbit & the Priest: A Tale for Children

This is a magic realism short story, a tale for children. I hope adults will enjoy it as well. In a small town in Mexico, a drought has ravaged crops, killed stock and left the villagers hungry. What can one rabbit do to help?

1119358244
The Rabbit & the Priest: A Tale for Children

This is a magic realism short story, a tale for children. I hope adults will enjoy it as well. In a small town in Mexico, a drought has ravaged crops, killed stock and left the villagers hungry. What can one rabbit do to help?

1.99 In Stock
The Rabbit & the Priest: A Tale for Children

The Rabbit & the Priest: A Tale for Children

by Gervasio Arrancado
The Rabbit & the Priest: A Tale for Children

The Rabbit & the Priest: A Tale for Children

by Gervasio Arrancado

eBook

$1.99 

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Overview

This is a magic realism short story, a tale for children. I hope adults will enjoy it as well. In a small town in Mexico, a drought has ravaged crops, killed stock and left the villagers hungry. What can one rabbit do to help?


Product Details

BN ID: 2940045853538
Publisher: StoneThread Publishing
Publication date: 04/24/2014
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 250 KB

About the Author

Gervasio Arrancado (the magic-realism writing persona of Harvey Stanbrough) was born in a small shack in Mexico and raised in the orphanage at Agua Idelfonso, several kilometers, give or take a few, from the fictional fishing village of Agua Rocosa. He is fortunate to have made the acquaintance of Augustus McCrae, Hub and Garth McCann, El Mariachi, Forest Gump, The Bride (Black Mamba), Agents J and K, a very old man with enormous wings, Juan-Carlos Salazár, Maldito, the chupacabra and several other notables. The most interesting man in America is his third cousin, twice removed. Gervasio visits regularly with his friend Nick Porter, whom he fondly calls Paco (nobody knows why, but we’re all certain he has his reasons), and with Juan-Carlos Salazár, whom he calls his colaborador in all things literary. To this day he lives and writes at that place on the horizon where reality just folds into imagination.

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