Book Reviews
BOOK REVIEW: Where the Dead Sit Talking by Brandon Hobson

BOOK REVIEW: Where the Dead Sit Talking by Brandon Hobson

Like Richard Wagamese’s novel Indian Horse, Where the Dead Sit Talking is a complex story simply told. Hobson’s prose isn’t quite as elegant as that of Wagamese but close. Both are chronicles of children growing up in the worst possible conditions, but where Indian...

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BOOK REVIEW: While Justice Sleeps by Stacey Abrams

BOOK REVIEW: While Justice Sleeps by Stacey Abrams

Stacey Abrams, lawyer and Georgia Democratic political superstar, writes a tense legal thriller starring Supreme Court legal clerk Avery Keene that begs the question of what happens when the US Supreme Court is split, and Howard Wynn, the justice with the swing vote...

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BOOK REVIEW: Escape to Florence by Kat Devereaux

BOOK REVIEW: Escape to Florence by Kat Devereaux

Escape to Florence switches between the present and World War II in telling the story of two women. The first, Tori, is a British author in the present day living on an isolated English estate with a cold, hypercritical husband. The second is Stella, a...

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BOOK REVIEW: La Vie, According to Rose by Lauren Parvizi

BOOK REVIEW: La Vie, According to Rose by Lauren Parvizi

La Vie, According to Rose, Lauren Parvizi’s debut, is a thought-provoking novel that covers a lot of ground.  First, it’s a heartfelt story of self-discovery coupled with grief and family issues. Rose, the eldest daughter of an Iranian man who escaped Iran just as the...

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BOOK REVIEW: The Spare Room by  Andrea Bartz

BOOK REVIEW: The Spare Room by Andrea Bartz

Andrea Bartz continues to explore complicated female relationships in her works, laced with suspense and sinister overtones, which expand the usual range of emotions women generally have in fiction. I always enjoy seeing what she's cooked up between her female...

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BOOK REVIEW: You Can Trust Me by Wendy Heard

BOOK REVIEW: You Can Trust Me by Wendy Heard

You Can Trust Me is an exciting thriller that grabs the reader from the start. Every character is far more than what they seem. Couple that with two unreliable narrators, and the reader is drawn further into the world of drifters and ultra-rich billionaires with each...

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BOOK REVIEW: The Wind Knows My Name by Isabel Allende

BOOK REVIEW: The Wind Knows My Name by Isabel Allende

The Wind Knows My Name begins with Kristallnacht and ends with the current Covid-19 pandemic. Samuel Adler, a five-year-old Jewish boy, is sent to England in 1938 to hopefully survive the extermination of the Jews in Germany. The novel then moves to the present and...

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BOOK REVIEW: The Embroidered Book by Kate Heartfield

BOOK REVIEW: The Embroidered Book by Kate Heartfield

The Embroidered Book, a historical fantasy, follows the Hapsburg girls, Maria Carolina and Marie Antoinette from childhood to becoming monarchs of Naples and France respectively. This is a well-researched volume which takes the history of these two women and binds it...

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