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Mischling

September 8, 2016

mischling

  It’s hard to imagine there is a place more horrible than Auschwitz but Affinity Konar has found the horror within the horror by setting her novel Mischling in Josef Mengele’s lab. Pearl and Stasha, twelve-year-old identical twins, entwined heart and soul from the womb, arrive at Auschwitz in 1944 to find themselves faced with the man whose sole goal is to tear them ... Read More...

5 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: book clubs, debut, Europe, historical fiction, Lee Boudreaux Books, literary, WWII

A Gentleman in Moscow

September 6, 2016

gentleman in moscow

When he is thirty-three Count Alexander Rostov finds himself sentenced by the Bolsheviks to house arrest at the Metropol, a prestigious hotel in the theater district of Moscow. Initially, it doesn’t seem a particularly harsh sentence because he has already been living there in a posh suite for four years. But now, he may not leave and the suite is no more. Instead, he is ... Read More...

10 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: book clubs, historical fiction, literary, Russia, Viking

A House Without Windows

August 24, 2016

a house without

  Author Nadia Hashimi’s family is from Afghanistan and her time spent listening to their stories and travelling in Afghanistan herself gives her novels the weight of truth. Her last novel, The Pearl that Broke its Shell, was a blend of the modern day with the story of the fabled women who guard an ancient shah’s harem. In A House Without Windows she stays firmly in ... Read More...

3 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: Afghanistan, book clubs, contemporary life, William Morrow, women

Bright, Precious Days

August 22, 2016

bright precious days

  Russell and Corrine Calloway move in all the right circles, but at the grand banquet that is New York society they’re seated at the children’s table. Yes, Russell owns his company, but it’s a publishing firm and while it has cachet it doesn’t have much cash. They live at an enviable address downtown, but in a cramped loft with one bathroom for four people. When Bright, ... Read More...

5 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: contemporary life, friendship, Knopf, Manhattan, marriage, midlife

How to Party with an Infant

August 17, 2016

how to party

  At twenty-eight Mele Bart finds herself as a single mother, because after giving birth to daughter Ellie her boyfriend Bobby tells her he was "kind of engaged" to someone else.  What?! Not one to wallow and with a infant to care for, Mele moves on. In an effort to have some kind of life outside her apartment she tries to find support in one of the neighborhood groups of ... Read More...

3 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: contemporary life, family, humor, San Francisco, Simon & Schuster

All the Ugly and Wonderful Things

August 15, 2016

ugly

Sometimes there are great books that are almost impossible to review. An example is A Little Life—a novel of abuse that, while it was brilliant, was not for everyone. But, what was not difficult about it was the fact of the abuse—a subject that does not divide or cause unease. Bryn Greenwood ‘s debut novel All the Ugly and Wonderful Things is the opposite of A Little Life in ... Read More...

13 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: book clubs, childhood, contemporary life, literary, Thomas Dunne Books

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