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Compound Fractures

October 28, 2013

compound fractures

  The last couple of weeks have been big reading weeks. Intense reading weeks. Worth every minute and page but leaving me fairly drained. So when I saw that Stephen White had come out with a new Alan Gregory mystery in August I decided to break away and revisit a favorite character. Compound Fracturesis the 20th and final novel in the Alan Gregory series and I’ve read all of ... Read More...

2 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: Boulder, Dutton, mystery

We Are Water: A Novel

October 25, 2013

we are water

How a work can be solid and delicate, earthy and of air is a mystery but describes Wally Lamb’s novel, We Are Water. Ostensibly it is the story of Annie Oh—wife, mother, artist and keeper of secrets, secrets that grow and beget other secrets, changing her life and the lives around her. When she is only five, she watches as her mother is swept away by a flood, along with her ... Read More...

5 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: book clubs, contemporary life, family, literary, women

Lexicon: A Novel

October 23, 2013

lexicon

There is no introduction in Max Barry’s novel  Lexicon. From page one where two men have inserted a needle into another man’s eye in an airport bathroom the reader is flung hard into a wholly different world. A compulsively readable, high speed, freakishly intelligent world. I read Lexicon during a 24-hour read-a-thon and it was the perfect novel for it because I didn’t want to ... Read More...

9 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: book clubs, dystopia, mystery, science fiction

The Goldfinch

October 21, 2013

goldfinch

  Donna Tartt’s latest novel is The Goldfinch. Oh My. This is a B.I.G. book, figuratively (Tartt’s first novel in eleven years) and literally (weighing in at a dense 771 pages on paper that is as weighty and glossy as the words printed on it). Theo Decker and his mother live alone in NYC. The story begins with a trip to the Metropolitan Museum before a school appointment for ... Read More...

18 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: art, book clubs, literary, Little Brown and Company, New York City, Pulitzer Prize

The Night Guest

October 16, 2013

night guest

  Ruth is a widow who lives alone and is awakened late one night by the sound of a tiger in her living room. As improbable as it sounds she is convinced, to the point of calling her grown son and describing the incident to him. Even after falling back asleep and waking to a normal morning, she wonders if it actually happened. It is this delicate interplay between reality and ... Read More...

4 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: book clubs, contemporary life, debut, Faber and Faber

Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy

October 14, 2013

Bridget Jones mad about the boy

  After an absence of 14 years Bridget Jones is back in Helen Fielding’s newest novel, Mad About the Boy. The novel is set in present day meaning that while the whole gang is back, they’ve all got steady jobs now and are discussing Botox and fillers to fight off aging. Yes, the flighty and funny Bridget Jones is now entering her fifties and, hold on to your hat, she has ... Read More...

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Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: chick lit, Knopf, London

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