Fülszöveg
//
With potent, dreamlike art and compelling prose, the first
two volumes of this extraordinary trilogy have captured
the creative imaginations of readers and literary reviewers
around the world. USA Today called Griffin & Sabine
wondrous, ingenious," and "gorgeous." The San Francisco
Chronicle wrote, "The somewhat conspiratorial thrill of
reading other people's mail becomes so infectious, it s
impossible to stop until the book's end." Now, in this final
volume, the two artists' haunting correspondence comes to
an astonishing conclusion.
JL received your Paris card. 1 waited but you did f "
not return on the 23rd. I waited until the 31st, hut s„ -
you did not return. What happened? Where are you?
— Sabine
Sabine's Notebook ended with a disturbing disclosure —
Griffin and Sabine had somehow eluded each other once
again. The Golden Mean begins with an even more
disturbing development: yr
I was sure I understood. Yet you were not here when
I returned, and there...
Tovább
Fülszöveg
//
With potent, dreamlike art and compelling prose, the first
two volumes of this extraordinary trilogy have captured
the creative imaginations of readers and literary reviewers
around the world. USA Today called Griffin & Sabine
wondrous, ingenious," and "gorgeous." The San Francisco
Chronicle wrote, "The somewhat conspiratorial thrill of
reading other people's mail becomes so infectious, it s
impossible to stop until the book's end." Now, in this final
volume, the two artists' haunting correspondence comes to
an astonishing conclusion.
JL received your Paris card. 1 waited but you did f "
not return on the 23rd. I waited until the 31st, hut s„ -
you did not return. What happened? Where are you?
— Sabine
Sabine's Notebook ended with a disturbing disclosure —
Griffin and Sabine had somehow eluded each other once
again. The Golden Mean begins with an even more
disturbing development: yr
I was sure I understood. Yet you were not here when
I returned, and there was no sign that you ever had been
here . Today comes your card, saying that you were in this
house for seven days after my return. I am bewildered .
— Griffin
It seems that each cannot exist in the presence of the
other. Yet neither can continue without the presence of
the other. And so, in this final volume of the Griffin &
Sabine trilogy, they struggle against the mysterious
forces that keep them apart. Time is running out:
Sabine's crystalline visions of Griffin's artwork grow
cloudy and dim, and a threatening stranger begins to
appear everywhere she goes. The Golden Mean is the tale
of Griffin and Sabine's journey towards one another,
sometimes dreamy, sometimes desperate, sometimes
nightmarish. The golden mean — the harmony of
perfect balance — is what they seek in the haunting
conclusion of this extraordinary correspondence. i
Told in the compelling style of the first two best-
selling volumes of the trilogy, The Golden Mean allows
readers to open richly decorated envelopes and draw
forth intricately illustrated letters, to decipher the quirky
handwritten postcards with their macabre and magical
artwork, to indulge, in other words, in the wonderfully
illicit activity of reading someone else's mail.
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