Book Reviews
Book Review: Every Last Breath by Juno Rushdan

Book Review: Every Last Breath by Juno Rushdan

Juno Rushdan’s debut novel, Every Last Breath, is intense. Suspense, action, and explicit sex scenes are roughly equally dispersed through the book. What is missing are the quiet sequels after the action to allow the reader to recuperate. Protagonist Maddox moves in...

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Book Review: Material Value by Julia L F Goldstein

Book Review: Material Value by Julia L F Goldstein

To celebrate Earth Day, I am sneaking in a book review on Monday rather than Thursday. The release of Julia Goldstein's Material Value: More Sustainable, Less Wasteful Manufacturing of Everything from Cell Phones to Cleaning Products is being timed with Earth Day, so...

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Book Review: Pickle’s Progress by Marcia Butler

Book Review: Pickle’s Progress by Marcia Butler

Pickle's Progress is the debut novel of Marcia Butler, retired world-famous oboist. The title drew me in as I could only think of one other novel with “Pickle” in the title, The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle. The latter is an 18th century satire in which a young,...

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Book Review: The Lost History of Dreams by Kris Waldherr

Book Review: The Lost History of Dreams by Kris Waldherr

The Lost History of Dreams is an accomplished debut novel which reminded me of classics such as Wuthering Heights and the more contemporary Possession by A.S. Byatt. Set in Victorian England, the book, rich with Gothic creepiness, layers several love stories into a...

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Book Review: The Parisian by Isabella Hammad

Book Review: The Parisian by Isabella Hammad

In her debut novel, Isabella Hammad uses richly-textured prose to invoke the turbulence of the Middle East right after World War I. I recently read Kurt Seyt and Shura by Nermin Bezmen and The Carpet Weaver of Usak by Kathryn Gauci, both of which deal roughly with the...

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Book Review: The Fourth Courier by Timothy Jay Smith

Book Review: The Fourth Courier by Timothy Jay Smith

Set shortly after the Soviet Union imploded, this international intrigue takes FBI agent Jay Porter into Poland. There he’s quickly involved in a case where three men have been found dead on a riverbank. All have a minor genetic deformity: a stub of a sixth finger....

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Book Review: The Lieutenant’s Nurse by Sara Ackerman

Book Review: The Lieutenant’s Nurse by Sara Ackerman

Because I'd read Sara Ackerman’s debut novel, Island of Sweet Pies and Soldiers, I continued with her second novel. Told in the dual, third-person perspectives of Eva Cassidy and Lieutenant Clark Spencer interspersed with real memos, headlines, and military...

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Book Review: In the City by the Lake by Taylor Saracen

Book Review: In the City by the Lake by Taylor Saracen

In the City by the Lake, Viktor, a half-Jewish Russian emigre, lives a life of quiet desperation as a low-grade mobster in Chicago from 1929 to 1938. Raised in an all-male family (his mother died birthing him), his Weltanschauung is skewed. He’s a tortured character...

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Book Review: The Chef’s Secret by Crystal King

Book Review: The Chef’s Secret by Crystal King

I had to read The Chef's Secret because I’ve lived extensively in Italy. I've also read Crystal King’s The Feast of Sorrow and enjoyed her approach to food. Her newest historical novel did not let me down. The descriptions of food were enough to make me...

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Book Review: Another Side of Paradise by Sally Koslow

Book Review: Another Side of Paradise by Sally Koslow

I started this book and decided I really wasn’t interested in reading a story about F. Scott Fitzgerald in Hollywood at that particular moment, preferring something lighter and fluffier. But I decided to read a few pages, and the next thing I knew I’d finished the...

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Book Review: Love Fiesta Style

Book Review: Love Fiesta Style

The San Antonio Romance Authors, fondly known as SARA, took me in when I was a fledgling writer and held my hand through the various revisions of my two novels. Now, we've banded together to create Love Fiesta Style, an anthology of seventeen short stories...

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Book Review: The Forgiving Kind by Donna Everhart

Book Review: The Forgiving Kind by Donna Everhart

The Forgiving Kind was released by Kensington on January 29, 2019. Immediately, I was drawn to the story because I grew up with a similar hard-scrapple cotton farming family in Texas and picked cotton with my cousins and migrant farm workers. Author Donna...

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Book Review: Hearts of the Missing by Carol Potenza

Book Review: Hearts of the Missing by Carol Potenza

I have read every single Tony Hillerman book and, being raised in the Southwest, loved how he (and later his daughter Anne Hillerman) captured so beautifully the aura of the land and its people. When I heard Hearts of the Missing had won the Tony Hillerman Prize for...

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