HarperCollins

Book Review: The Ghetto Within by Santiago H. Amigorena

The Ghetto Within by Santiago H. Amigorena also deals with issues of identity, as many immigrants do. Are they Argentina?…

2 years ago

Feature: What Jonah Knew by Barbara Graham

A 7-year-old boy recalls the memories of a missing 22-year-old musician in this psychological thriller about fierce love between mothers…

2 years ago

Book Review: Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman

Gaiman lets the reader do a lot of the imagining, he stays away from overexplaining “how” or even “why” –…

2 years ago

Book Review: Sweet Sweet Revenge, Ltd. By Jonas Jonasson

Jonas Jonasson seems to, once again, take pleasure in writing farces, comedy of errors that happen to somehow work out.…

2 years ago

Book Review: The Resistance Girl by Mandy Robotham

I appreciated the stress and dangers the protagonists went through. I enjoyed reading about the cultural importance of the ocean,…

2 years ago

Book Review: Daughters of the Occupation by Shelly Sanders

The research the author did shine, and I’ve learned several things about Latvia, the region, the way Latvian Jews viewed…

2 years ago

Book Review: How to Read Literature Like a Professor by Thomas C. Foster

I always wondered what a bored literature professor saw in books things which I either couldn’t, wouldn’t, or simply didn’t…

2 years ago

Book Review: The Unfamiliar Garden by Benjamin Percy

While The Unfamiliar Garden by Benjamin Percy could certainly classify as a horror novel, I found it to be less…

2 years ago

Book Review: Her Secret War by Pam Lecky

Sara Gillepsie is her family’s sole survivor after a Nazi bombing. Leaving her home in Ireland, she goes to work…

2 years ago

Book Review: The Taking of Jemima Boone by Matthew Pearl

The Taking of Jemima Boone tells of how the kidnapping of Jemima Boone, daughter of Daniel Boone, by Native Americans,…

3 years ago

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