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Down the Up Escalator

April 5, 2013

Down the Up Escalator

By fall 2010 there were 14 million officially unemployed Americans—40 percent of them classified as the long-term unemployed. An additional ten million were working part-time but said they wanted full-time jobs. Fifteen million more had dropped out of the labor force since this recession began.  There is no shortage of books on what is known as The Great Recession but, by ... Read More...

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Filed Under: Book Reviews, Non-fiction Tagged: book clubs, Doubleday, economics, recession, social issues, unemployment

Friendfluence: The Surprising Ways Friends Make Us Who We Are

March 15, 2013

Friendfluence

  We tend to think all of our traits and life decisions can be traced back to our genes or the influence of our parents or partners, but it has become increasingly clear that our peers are stealth sculptors of everything from our basic linguistic habits to our highest aspirations.   Friendfluence is a well-researched but readable look at what many consider to be the most ... Read More...

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Filed Under: Book Reviews, Non-fiction Tagged: book clubs, Doubleday, friendship, psychology, relationships

The Drowning House

February 6, 2013

drowning

Clare is a tortured soul. Through one of life’s accidents and no one’s fault her precious daughter is dead and it appears likely her marriage is failing as her husband is recovering from the loss and she is not. But he had completed his task, delivered his burden to wherever it is old sorrows go. While I had barely started. I was beginning to think that grieving the loss of my ... Read More...

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Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: debut, mystery, Nan A. Talese

Parlor Games

January 23, 2013

Parlor Games

You might know her as May, Pauline, Baroness, or Florence but this is one woman who gets around, much to the reader’s delight, in Maryka Biaggio’s debut novel, Parlor Games. Born May Dugas in Menominee, Michigan, this is a young lady who determined early on that the world was what she wanted and what she would have, despite the fact that her family is poor and it’s the 1890s ... Read More...

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Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: 19th century, Anchor Books, book clubs, debut, historical fiction

The Sandcastle Girls

December 19, 2012

The Sandcastle Girls

It was as I was nearing the finish of Chris Bohjalian’s latest novel, The Sandcastle Girls, that I was struck by how insulated and sheltered we are in the United States. I say that with a full understanding of recent events and their horrors. What I mean, is that at no time in any of our lives have we had to worry that our country or even our state or city was going to be taken ... Read More...

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Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: Armenian genocide, book clubs, Doubleday, historical fiction, World War I

Heads in Beds

November 30, 2012

Heads in Beds

Jacob Tomsky graduated from college with a degree in philosophy and no idea what he wanted to do. It is summer in New Orleans and before jumping a career and all that entails he decides to take a job at a new hotel as a valet—to test the working waters. With his personable nature and quick mind, Tomsky rapidly moves from valet to the underworld of housekeeping management while ... Read More...

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Filed Under: Book Reviews, Non-fiction Tagged: book clubs, Doubleday, memoir, travel

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