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The Thirteenth Daughter of the Moon

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Cookie sets off again with her compatriots - Chiara, a hot-blooded professor, and her nubile, bemused daughter, Izzy; Muscovado Taine, Izzy's lover, a Jamaican who smells of allspice; Ananda, a blond attorney with her own surprising love bond; and the painter and father-to-be, Renato. They head together for San Francisco Bay, hoping to travel from there to the Lost Coast itself. All along the way, the stories they need seek them out: the story of two hitchhikers who turn out to be an ancient poet and a medieval saint; the story of the coyote, who is marking out the progress of the soul; the story of Chiara and Ananda enticing chosen students into a future that loves them; and the old true story of the Music of the Spheres.

256 pages, Paperback

First published October 1, 1997

10 people want to read

About the author

Steven Nightingale

20 books21 followers
Steven Nightingale is an author of books of poetry, novels, and essays. He divides his time between the San Francisco Bay Area; Reno, Nevada; and Granada, Spain.

Personal and Family Life

Nightingale was born in Reno, Nevada, and attended public schools there before being admitted to Stanford University, where he studied literature, religion, and computer science. He has lived near London, in Paris, and in Granada, Spain, and traveled worldwide, often to wild country. He moved to Granada in 2001, after buying, with his wife Lucy Blake, a carmen in the ancient barrio of the Albayzin. He and Lucy have one daughter, Gabriella.

Writing

Nightingale is the author of two novels, six books of sonnets, and a travel and history book about Granada. His work is widely anthologized, and he has taught poetry by invitation in over fifty schools and universities in Nevada and California.

His first poetry was published in 1983, by the magazine Coevolution Quarterly, and his first novel, The Lost Coast, and its sequel, The Thirteenth Daughter of the Moon, were published by St. Martin’s Press in New York, in 1995 and 1996.

Following those books, he began to assemble into manuscripts his sonnets, a poetic form with an eight-hundred year history. Nightingale specialized in the sonnet, believing that its history and durability give the form a straightforward and uncanny power. His six books of poetry begin with the limited edition Cartwheels, followed by the trade edition Planetary Tambourine, and four more collections of ninety-nine sonnets each, all published by the Black Rock Press, in their Rainshadow Editions.

In 2015, Counterpoint Press in Berkeley, California brought out Granada: A Pomegranate in the Hand of God. The book describes the move of the author and his family to Granada, and goes on to address the history of gardens and of the Albayzin, the extraordinary history of Al-Andalus, the sacred geometry in Islamic tile work, the work of the Sufis, the history of flamenco, and the life and poetry of Federico Garcia Lorca.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Brett Pyle.
26 reviews1 follower
June 2, 2020
The completion of a story started in The Lost Coast. They are really one novel divided into two books. More magic and craziness all mixed with terrible reality. More great storytelling from Mr. Nightingale.
Profile Image for Katy Lohman.
490 reviews18 followers
June 18, 2020
Addictive surrealistic story. The characters are wonderful, and the oddest things will happen to them.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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