The High Summer Read-a-Thon July 16-22

2014-03-17T14:32:04-04:00

I have a problem with my library loans just now: I keep adding to their numbers, and then I pull books from my own shelves to read instead. Now I have seven holds to pick up and need to read seven items to have room on my card to borrow

The High Summer Read-a-Thon July 16-222014-03-17T14:32:04-04:00

Khanh Ha’s Flesh (2012)

2014-03-17T15:28:31-04:00

From the title, readers might guess that Khanh Ha's first novel, Flesh, will be of a visceral nature. And from the cover image, with a young woman's neck and shoulders and long braid disappearing into wafts of smoke, readers will suspect a romantic tale. Once they learn that it takes

Khanh Ha’s Flesh (2012)2014-03-17T15:28:31-04:00

And Laughter Fell From the Sky: An Enticing Debut

2021-09-24T12:09:28-04:00

Abhay sits on the grass in front of a bar, on the opening page of And Laughter Fell From the Sky. Harper Collins, 2012 The five-lane highway across from Kent State  University is as hectic as the afternoon rush in Grand Central Station was, one hundred years ago, in

And Laughter Fell From the Sky: An Enticing Debut2021-09-24T12:09:28-04:00

“Who Do You Think You Are?” Alice Munro

2014-03-20T20:07:14-04:00

Who does Rose think she is? Either the question has been asked of her, or she has asked it of herself, throughout her life. It's fitting that the final story give voice to that. It's also fitting that the reader feels the question has been half-answered in the final paragraph

“Who Do You Think You Are?” Alice Munro2014-03-20T20:07:14-04:00

Spelling It Out: The Juliet Stories

2014-03-20T20:07:36-04:00

Let me begin by saying that the cover of this novel is perfect. Juliet, with her eyes closed: she could be anywhere, but in assembling an understanding of the world around her, images from her time in Nicaragua serve as a foundation. And the vivid imagery: the combination of photographs

Spelling It Out: The Juliet Stories2014-03-20T20:07:36-04:00
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