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It’s Monday, June 5th: What Are You Reading?

June 5, 2017

Monday

  In case you didn't know, I’m a big fan of synchronicity. Coincidence is so boring when you can choose to believe that the most random things are part of a greater pattern! So…how awesome is it that my Monday reading is A) one of my favorite authors B) she lives in Cleveland and C) I’M IN CLEVELAND! I know, I’m giddy, too. And in my little rainbow unicorn mind ... Read More...

5 Comments
Filed Under: Feature, Reading Tagged: Harper, social issues

May Reading Recap

June 2, 2017

May

  To call this month’s reading recap a mashup is an understatement. It could also be the library checkout recap or even the non-fiction recap—which is huge because I’m virtually certain I’ve never read more than one non-fiction book a month, much less four. And on all kinds of subjects! But there you have it. May also turned out to be another monster month for how much I ... Read More...

7 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Feature, Fiction, Non-fiction, Reading Tagged: beauty, Bloomsbury, fashion, food, health, mini-reviews, mystery, William Morrow

Lost Women: Mini-Reviews

May 31, 2017

lost

First of all, despite the mood of the graphic, there’s no need for concern (it's not me!). I chose the photo because it’s evocative of today’s books. I read A Line Made by Walking and Chemistry over a month apart, but for as different as they are they both revolve around women who have lost their way. Which, unless you are very unusual or highly fortunate, is the case at some ... Read More...

5 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: contemporary life, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Knopf, mini-reviews, women

The Heirs: A Novel by Susan Rieger

May 29, 2017

heirs

  Sometimes, misinterpreting book blurbs can be a big mistake, leading to disappointment and frustration. Then there are the amazing times when a book sounds like one thing and turns out to be something even better. I’ve had both experiences and while the former can make you swear to never read another synopsis or blurb, the latter can be like Christmas dipped in ... Read More...

9 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: contemporary life, Crown, family, literary, Manhattan, wealth

The Preservationist: A Novel by Justin Kramon

May 26, 2017

preservationist

  She’d never been looked at that way before, with that peculiar mix of intensity and distance. Sam is a thirty-nine-year-old kitchen worker at Stradler College. He’s led a life of movement from one place to another and one job to another at each of these places but turning forty is starting to press on him. Shouldn’t he be more settled? Shouldn’t he find a more ... Read More...

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Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: Pegasus, suspense, thriller

Something Wicked This Way Comes: Mini-Reviews

May 24, 2017

Shakespeare

  In a surprising bit of synchronicity, I read two great novels recently that both referenced Shakespeare—which is why the quote from Macbeth for this post’s title. Also, because there is a lot of wicked in both these novels. In New Boy, Tracy Chevalier adapts the very grown-up themes of Othello to 1970s elementary school. Then M.L. Rio uses Shakespeare’s plays as the ... Read More...

8 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: childhood, Flatiron Books, friendship, mini-reviews, mystery, retellings

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