Jeno Mayfield, a lawyer-turned-mayfield, was a former mayor of Cassish City, well-to-do and well-rounded with his wife Arlette and two daughters, Juliet and Cressida. He was active in social life and was also an activist who participated hard in local volunteer work with his wife and beautiful eldest daughter. Though it was a little difficult to deal with a tricky little girl who couldn't conceal her shady, self-destructive instincts, she was a caring, intelligent father who also enjoyed sitting face to face at the table and arguing with such a daughter. But his little daughter disappears last night on July 9, 2005. And the person who was with the girl that night was the beautiful eldest daughter Juliet's former fiance, Brett Kincaid. The young man confesses to the police that he killed her and dumped her. The girl's body is not found even after a massive search. What the hell happened that night to a skinny, dwarf Cressida and a young man suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder in Iraq? The peaceful city begins to fluctuate. Where is Cressida, the backbone that has thrown family members and a man and a Cassi community into chaos and created a rift in everyone's lives? What experience will they go on or stop with in life and reality after that Will the scattered lives be scattered, or will they be continued and created a different picture? Nightmare pieces of secret debris, mysterious pieces of that night's memory start to fit in little by little.
Joyce Carroll Oates, who has explored the darkness of the human soul and painted the violence of the world that fizzles out the underlying fear and life, delves into the moral dilemmas of the human sea, the gap, faith and justice, the misuse and justification of punishment, and the group through a series of tragedies faced by a family in "Cash." In particular, it sends a more intense message than ever with elaborate narrative that links the impact of war violence on human life to another form of inhumane punishment called "Su-gam" and "death penalty." Like a war of evil to punish evil, the morality of a nation is often in a dilemma. Oates explores the possibility of a real return to the world, painting the suffering and subsequent lives of those caught up in the violence at its borders, calling for empathy and understanding of the human weaknesses of different characters, the social situations they are bound to.
a plot
A 19-year-old girl, Cressida Mayfield, disappears like a snake in a thick forest in Cassie, northern New York. After a major search, the police secure an unexpected suspect. This is Corporal Brett Kincaid, a former fiancee whom the girl's sister Juliet loved. The post-traumatic stress disorder veteran's car has bloodstains and hair believed to belong to the girl, and he was the last person Cressida met that night, according to witnesses. The Mayfields wrestle with the possibility of losing their daughter forever.
Introduction to Writers Joyce Carol Oates
He was born in Rockport, New York, on June 16, 1938. When I was 19, I won a prize at the University of Syracuse for "Old World" and received a master's degree in English literature from the University of Wisconsin. He taught literature and creation at Detroit University from 1962 and Princeton University in 1978. Since publishing his first feature "Dizzy Fall" in 1964, he has been keenly capturing the life of modern people filled with absurdity and violence with his vigorous activities across almost all literary fields, including poetry, prose, criticism and plays, including more than 50 feature films. He won the O'Henry Award for "In the Ice Country" in 1967 and "The Dead" in 1973, the National Book Award for "Them" in 1970, the Bramstoker Award for "Zombie" in 1996, the Feminine Prize for "Falling Water" (1993), "The Reason of My Living" (1995)" and the Pulitzer (2001). In 2011, he received the Bramstoker Award for "Wake Up" and the World Fantasy Literature Award for "Fossil Shape." He won the Common Wells Award and the Kenyon Review Award for his achievements in literature in 2003, the Chicago Tribune's Lifelong Achievement Award in 2006 and Jerusalem in 2019. Since 2004, he has been mentioned as one of the most likely candidates for the Nobel Prize in Literature Other works include "The Multi-Veni Family," "Evil Child," "Daddy Love," "The Old Man Collecting Girls," and "Foxfire," prose books "The Enemy Sun," "The Belief of the Author," poetry books "The Fire of Anonymous," "The Fire of Angels," "Time Travelers" and "The Softness."
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