Book Reviews
Book Review: Chanel’s Riviera

Book Review: Chanel’s Riviera

Per the author, Anne de Courcy, this book (Chanel's Riviera: Glamour, Decadence, and Survival in Peace and War, 1930-1944) isn't intended to be a definitive biography of Coco Chanel. It is more of a biography of a place—the French Riviera—before and during the Second...

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Book Review: You Can See More from Up Here by Mark Guerin

Book Review: You Can See More from Up Here by Mark Guerin

I was captivated by Mark Guerin's You Can See More From Up Here from the first sentence. The relationships in reporter Walker McGuire’s life are gradually amped up in an engaging way as is the suspense. The reader has ample opportunity to bond with each character as...

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Book Review: All the Silent Voices by Elena Mikalsen

Book Review: All the Silent Voices by Elena Mikalsen

This is author Elena Mikalsen’s third book, and with each her prose has tightened. Here, she draws upon her experience as a psychologist. Her protagonist, college student Emma, has been raped, beaten, and left for dead by a football player. She is forced from school...

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Book Review: The Disharmony of Silence by Linda Rosen

Book Review: The Disharmony of Silence by Linda Rosen

The Disharmony of Silence, released March 5, 2020 by Black Rose Writing, authored by Linda Rosen shows how secrets affect families through future generations. She tells the dual stories of Lena and Carolyn through alternating time lines separated by eighty-plus years....

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Book Review: Writers & Lovers by Lily King

Book Review: Writers & Lovers by Lily King

Lily King’s Writers & Lovers is an extraordinary novel. As a writer I appreciated King’s efforts at capturing the life of a writer; they seem genuine as she describes the difficulty of putting words on a page in a meaningful way. This is King’s fifth novel and...

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Book Review: The Sinful Scot

Book Review: The Sinful Scot

Though The Sinful Scot is the third book in Maddison Michaels’s Saints and Scoundrels series, it can be read as a standalone novel.  Connie is raised to marry a man chosen by her parents, one most likely to elevate the family status. Unfortunately, the duke they...

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Book Review: The Blood-Dimmed Tide by Michael R. Johnston

Book Review: The Blood-Dimmed Tide by Michael R. Johnston

The Blood-Dimmed Tide is the second in Michael R. Johnston’s Remembrance War space opera series. It would have been helpful to have read the first (The Widening Gyre), but Johnston provides enough backstory during The Blood-Dimmed Tide that reading the first isn’t...

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Book Review: Echoed in My Bones by Lisa A. Sturm

Book Review: Echoed in My Bones by Lisa A. Sturm

Echoed in My Bones deals with interracial adoption. I chose to read it as I adopted a biracial child years ago and am interested in the topic. I also read the National Geographic “Black and White” issue (April 2018) with a photograph of twins, one black and one white,...

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Book Review: Poison by Rada Jones, MD

Book Review: Poison by Rada Jones, MD

Poison is a thriller set in primarily in the Emergency Room where Dr. Emma Steele works. People who visit the ER are returning as codes or dropping dead within a few days of their initial ER visit. But only her most vile patients are dying: the child abusers, wife...

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Book Review: Wild Life by Keena Roberts

Book Review: Wild Life by Keena Roberts

Keena Roberts, in this delightful coming-of-age memoir, describes a life divided. Her parents, both primatologists, are on the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania and divide their time between field research and teaching. Where they go, they take their two...

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Book Review: A Beginning at the End by Mike Chen

Book Review: A Beginning at the End by Mike Chen

As in his debut novel, Here and Now and Then, Mike Chen brings a refreshing new emotionalism to science fiction with his latest work, A Beginning at the End. This is a refreshing take on post-apocalyptic sci-fi. A flu pandemic devastates the world population—and takes...

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Book Review: Everything Here Is Beautiful by Mira T. Lee

Book Review: Everything Here Is Beautiful by Mira T. Lee

Everything Here Is Beautiful is Mira T. Lee’s debut novel, and a very sophisticated one it is. In the back of her book, there’s an interview with her in which she describes how she didn’t want to write about mental illness per se, but about relationships and how they...

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Book Review: Past This Point by Nicole Mabry

Book Review: Past This Point by Nicole Mabry

I read this book because I’d heard that it was apocalyptic fiction from a woman’s point of view, which seems to be relatively rare. I enjoyed it thoroughly. As a physician, I’ve been trained to anticipate influenza epidemics and pandemics. The medical aspects were...

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Book Review: Double-Crossing the Bridge by Sarah J. Sover

Book Review: Double-Crossing the Bridge by Sarah J. Sover

If you ever wanted a story about the Underworld, filled with trolls and other monsters, Double-Crossing the Bridge is for you. Sarah J. Sover's debut successfully blends an Ocean’s Eleven-type heist with sheer fantasy with high Monty-Python-quality wildly-hysterical...

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Book Review: Hamartia by Raquel Rich

Book Review: Hamartia by Raquel Rich

Hamartia successfully blends time travel with reincarnation with the interesting concept that souls can be harvested. In the futuristic city of Hamartia, Grace Dartmouth learns that her nine-year-old son is afflicted with metagenesis, a disease in which a human’s soul...

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