Book Reviews
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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BOOK REVIEW: A Court at Constantinople by Anthony Earth

BOOK REVIEW: A Court at Constantinople by Anthony Earth

As someone who's lived around the world, I know firsthand how cultures can collide, and the book, A Court at Constantinople, does a great job showing just that. After the Crimean War (1853 to 1856), Turkey wants to expand its international reputation and is selling...

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BOOK REVIEW: Hester by Laurie Lico Albanese

BOOK REVIEW: Hester by Laurie Lico Albanese

Hester is a marvelous, sensual tale which envisions a young Scottish immigrant, Isobel Gamble, as she arrives in Salem, Massachusetts. When abandoned there by her husband, she mets and falls immediately in love with the just-out-of-college Nathaniel Hawthorne. As...

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BOOK REVIEW: Our Wolves by Luanne Castle

BOOK REVIEW: Our Wolves by Luanne Castle

I always enjoy Luanne Castle’s poetry and its connection to our past and to nature. Our Wolves is a bit of a departure from that, but one I thoroughly enjoyed. Here, Castle subverts the old fairy tale, “Little Red Riding Hood” and, though a unique combination of...

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BOOK REVIEW: Night of Fire by Colin Thubron

BOOK REVIEW: Night of Fire by Colin Thubron

I enjoyed Night of Fire. Its structure is somewhat akin to A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan in that it is a series of short stories bound together by a rather subtle common thread, in the case of Night of Fire, a rooming house going up in flames, one floor...

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BOOK REVIEW: The View from Half Dome by Jill Caugherty

BOOK REVIEW: The View from Half Dome by Jill Caugherty

Set in San Francisco during the Great Depression, The View from Half Dome is the story of sixteen-year-old Isabel Dickinson. After her longshoreman father dies on the docks, she and her family (her mother, a teenaged brother James, and a nine-year-old sister) move to...

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BOOK REVIEW: Lightning Strike by William Kent Krueger

BOOK REVIEW: Lightning Strike by William Kent Krueger

Lightning Strike is the eighteenth of twenty Cork O’Connor mysteries, a new-to-me mystery series. I started with #18 because it’s the prequel to the rest of the series. I recently read Krueger’s extraordinary novel, Ordinary Grace, which is a beautifully-written...

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BOOK REVIEW: Hyacinth by Minerva Spencer

BOOK REVIEW: Hyacinth by Minerva Spencer

I raced through Hyacinth in one evening. Regency historical romance tends to bog down in descriptions of the ton and its rigid social mores and not have a lot of pizzazz, so I really welcomed a novel with a neuro-divergent heroine with an aversion to touch and a...

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BOOK REVIEW: Downfall by Mark Rubinstein

BOOK REVIEW: Downfall by Mark Rubinstein

Downfall is a fast-paced novel set in New York City in the 1980s. It is something of a mashup of a police procedural and character-driven fiction and includes the points of view of the two detectives, a physician, Richard Shepard, whose father is murdered, and the...

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