Book Reviews
BOOK REVIEW: This Terrible Beauty by Katrin Schumann

BOOK REVIEW: This Terrible Beauty by Katrin Schumann

There’s a lot to like about This Terrible Beauty. It is historical fiction at its finest, filled with injustice, sacrifice, and redemption. I was drawn to it, as a former photographer, because Bettina Heilstrom, the female protagonist, is a photojournalist, and I was...

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BOOK REVIEW: The Resurrectionist by Paul T. Scheuring

BOOK REVIEW: The Resurrectionist by Paul T. Scheuring

The Resurrectionist is a gritty, ominous, atmospheric, bleak gothic novel filled with multiple unreliable narrators and dislikable if not despicable characters. Set in London in the early nineteenth century, it shows the life of people surviving in London’s worst...

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BOOK REVIEW: Dream Wheels by Richard Wagamese

BOOK REVIEW: Dream Wheels by Richard Wagamese

Dream Wheels is my second novel by Richard Wagamese (the first being Indian Horse), and I’ve now put all this other works on my to-be-read pile. In both novels, I was impressed by his prose and his storytelling. I sat up most of the night reading it and had to fight...

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BOOK REVIEW: Cities of Women by  Kathleen B. Jones

BOOK REVIEW: Cities of Women by Kathleen B. Jones

Cities of Women is a multiple point of view novel that shifts between Verity Frazier, a modern academic, Bèatrice, a medieval French artist, and Christine de Pizan, the French-Italian writer for the court of Charles VI, during the late fourteenth and early fifteenth...

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BOOK REVIEW: Maddalena and the Dark by Julia Fine

BOOK REVIEW: Maddalena and the Dark by Julia Fine

Maddalena and the Dark is a dark fantasy or a dark academia-type story set in eighteen-century Venice, mostly at the Ospedale della Pietà, a cloistered school for foundling girls. Most are abandoned at the doorstep and have no known family. As they are raised, if they...

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BOOK REVIEW: Louise and Vincent by Diane Byington

BOOK REVIEW: Louise and Vincent by Diane Byington

Vincent van Gogh, the most iconic of the Post-Impressionist artists, spends the last few months of his life in Auvers-sur-Oise, France, painting the countryside some thirty kilometers from Paris. He lives in the Ravoux family’s inn. This book is a fictional account of...

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BOOK REVIEW: The Shadow of Perseus by Claire Heywood

BOOK REVIEW: The Shadow of Perseus by Claire Heywood

The Shadow of Perseus is another female-centric retelling of ancient Greek myths, this one the story of Perseus, the purported son of Danae and Zeus, slayer of Gorgons (Medusa) and all-round hero. Author Heywood leaves the Greek gods in the background, having them...

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BOOK REVIEW: The Dollmaker of Krakow by R.M. Romero

BOOK REVIEW: The Dollmaker of Krakow by R.M. Romero

The Dollmaker of Krakow takes a difficult subject, the Holocaust, and through the use of fantasy and a smidgeon of magic, makes it palatable enough for children to serve as an introduction to genocide. But, just because this is a children’s story, doesn’t mean adults...

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BOOK REVIEW: The Heiress Swap by Maddison Michaels

BOOK REVIEW: The Heiress Swap by Maddison Michaels

Poor little orphan Evie is taken in by her wealthy aunt and uncle. To show her appreciation, she’s tried to be compliant and helpful, to the point of journeying to England to learn to be a secretary and work in her uncle’s company. Her wealthy cousin Aimee convinces...

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