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Casebook: A Novel

April 21, 2014

casebook

  From the time he is nine years old Miles Adler-Rich is a snoop. Not just a hanging around snoop, a hiding walkie-talkies and wiring-an-extension-into-the-family’s-phone-line snoop. Initially, he just wants to know if his parents are going to relent and let him watch Survivor but when his efforts to know all fail and they announce they’re getting divorced, it becomes ... Read More...

10 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: book clubs, coming-of-age, contemporary life, Knopf

The Headmaster’s Wife

March 3, 2014

headmasters wife

Some books are written with the intent to stun a reader with surprise and don’t offer much beyond that. Others, like The Headmaster's Wife by Thomas Christopher Greene, use the surprise (the double surprise, even) as a jumping off point to much deeper issues. It is also a life lesson, one that I failed, because I jumped without thought into the novel’s initial trope of a ... Read More...

15 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: book clubs, mystery, New England, suspense, Thomas Dunne Books

After I’m Gone

February 12, 2014

after im gone

Laura Lippman is back with a runaway bookie, the wife he adores, his three daughters, and his stripper girlfriend. In her latest, After I'm Gone, Felix Brewer is indicted in 1976 on gambling charges and decides his constitution is not made for prison so he jumps bail. The novel opens with his escape to an undisclosed location and a private plane. Helping him escape and taking ... Read More...

2 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: book clubs, mystery, William Morrow

The Winter People

February 10, 2014

winter people

  Little girls are all sugar and spice and everything nice. So what does it mean when they see things other people can’t? And talk to their dolls with a secret language? In Jennifer McMahon’s new novel, The Winter People, it means a whole lot of creepy is coming on. The novel opens with nine-year-old Sara seeing a friend running through the forest near her home in West Hall, ... Read More...

12 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: book clubs, Doubleday, mystery, Vermont

Bristol House

February 6, 2014

bristol

  Annie Kendall’s life has not gone the way she’d hoped it would. In the midst of a stellar academic career as an architectural historian she let a fondness for alcohol get away from her and in doing so lost custody of her young son. By the time she regained her sobriety both her personal life and career were in shambles. It is fortuitous then that billionaire Phil Weinraub ... Read More...

5 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: historical fiction, London, mystery, Viking

The Wife, The Maid, and the Mistress

January 29, 2014

wife maid mistress

In a clever move, the title of The Wife, The Maid, and the Mistress describes the three main characters in the book, eliminating any need for the reader to figure out what the novel is about. There is Stella, the socialite long-suffering wife of Judge Crater who doesn’t seem overwhelmingly concerned when he disappears, only when she finds out his paychecks are going to stop. ... Read More...

12 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: book clubs, Doubleday, historical fiction, Manhattan, mystery

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