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Happy Any Day Now

August 7, 2013

happy any day now

  Happy Any Day Now begins with the approach of Judith Soo Jin Raphael’s fiftieth birthday and in addition to the normal aging nerves, she is dealing with the return of her college love (who dumped her because his blue-blood mother didn’t think she was good enough for their family), the return of her father (who left her and her mother when she was still a little girl), and ... Read More...

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Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: contemporary life, cultural, NAL, women

What the Nanny Saw

July 26, 2013

What the Nanny Saw

  What the Nanny Saw is not the first book to look at the insular and dysfunctional world of nannies and the uber-rich but it may be the first to delve into that life as the employers are on their way down. Ali Sparrow is taking a year off from school to earn enough money to pay for her final year and has chosen the role of nanny as her job. She lands a plum assignment with ... Read More...

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Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: chick lit, contemporary life, London, Penguin

How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia

June 21, 2013

How to get filthy rich in rising Asia

  To be effective, a self-help book requires two things. First, the help it suggests should be helpful. Obviously. And second, without which the first is impossible, the self it’s trying to help should have some idea of what help is needed. For our collaboration to work, in other words, you must know yourself well enough to understand what you want and where you want to ... Read More...

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Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: book clubs, contemporary life, cultural, Riverhead Books, Southeast Asia

And the Mountains Echoed

May 20, 2013

And the Mountains Echoed

  I suspect the truth is that we are waiting, all of us, against insurmountable odds, for something extraordinary to happen to us.  The first time we met Khaled Hosseini was ten years ago when he took us to a place called Afghanistan, which most of us knew only as a foreign enemy, not a country. In The Kite Runner we walked through the door to another world that both opened ... Read More...

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Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: Afghanistan, book clubs, cultural, literary, Riverhead Books

Call Me Zelda

May 6, 2013

Call Me Zelda

With another film version of The Great Gatsby coming out this week, now is the perfect time for new fiction about the life of the Fitzgeralds or, more specifically, Zelda Fitzgerald. There are many stories circulated about her outrageous behavior but it is much like the paparazzi today—what is real and what is exaggerated or fabricated? In her new book, Call Me Zelda, Erika ... Read More...

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Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: 1920s, book clubs, historical fiction, NAL

When Captain Flint Was Still a Good Man

April 26, 2013

When Captain Flint Was Still a Good Man

  Those of us left behind dug in. Through the fall, through the winter, it seemed we lived on the border of a real life lived elsewhere. It seemed that the absence was ours somehow, not theirs, that we were the ones who were gone.  When Captain Flint Was Still a Good Man is an aptly titled debut that takes place on Loyalty Island, off of Washington State, where the ... Read More...

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Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: book clubs, coming-of-age, debut, mystery, Riverhead Books

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