Reseña del editor:
Fiction. Communes? Free food, free housing, free love. Cool. But not at Rancho Armadillo, in northern New Mexico. The Armadillos moved from both coasts, hoping to escape the evils of city living, but they wind up with a grocery food order, a garden and hard work, houses they built with purchased lumber, and strict rules of behavior. On the side of a mountain, not Mt. Olympus, as one man believes, life and love and death rest heavily on the shoulders of some, but seem hardly to touch others. City dwellers recognize the problems alcohol and drugs pose and the madness that may overcome anyone. But transporting chickens under a full moon? Delivering a calf and then milking the new mother? Filling a cistern in the snow? Hilarious, sort of. And love, well, is love ever free?
Biografía del autor:
Judith Stephens was born in Washington, D.C. She grew up in California, Washington State, and the mountain west. She graduated from the University of California in Berkeley, where she worked as a forensic anthropologist at the Phoebe Hearst Museum of Anthropology. Her MA is from San Francisco State University, where she taught creative writing. She has worked as a legal secretary and a technical writer.
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