Fiction

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“The tale is interesting, captivating, and suspenseful.

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“. . . a feat worth celebrating, and . . . a book worth reading—if only for the writer’s charm and way with words.”

“I had a life. Now I have a situation.”

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“The book is a treasure; the photographs are a trove of fashion’s past and a chronicle of times gone by.”

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“This volume, like its predecessors, can be read for sheer joy of the prose.

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“In Don’t Try to Find Me, Brown, a practicing family therapist, offers a nuanced portrayal of the complex dance of marriage and familial relations.”

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“For some readers the science of Red Joan will resonate; for others, the politics will hold their interest; othe

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“All in all, though, One Plus One is a breezy summer read in the vein of Little Miss Sunshine, light and entertaining as long as one is content with unrealistic situations

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“An eyewitness to the discovery of Tutankhamun, but also to a secret hidden for decades: That Lord Carnarvon broke into the tomb before the official opening and removed articles for his per

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“Harder will be loved by many, hated by a few, and talked about by everyone.”

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“What a delight when a writer hits his target as deftly and with such beauty as Eric-Emmanuel Schmitt does in Invisible Love.”

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The City is many things: serious, light-hearted, nostalgic, courageous, scary, and mysterious.

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“This book is not for everyone but for the reader who enjoys finding the mystery in the mystery, it might be enjoyed.”

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“. . . no apologies made, no stones unturned. . . . A highly entertaining if somewhat barbed biography of the American Queen of Camelot.

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Swann Dive may have a contemporary setting whose snappy repartée is reminiscent of the comedy-mystery movies of the thirties . . .”

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“. . . the pencil illustrations interspersed throughout the book are charming.

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The best stories show us how to come through crisis and find something uplifting on the other side.

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Invisible is a difficult book to read because of the sheer horror and mayhem, but it’s even tougher to put down.”

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“So gripping the reader feels metaphorical hands around his throat, American Woman builds to a bloody, heart-stopping confrontation . . .

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“So gripping the reader feels metaphorical hands around his throat, American Woman builds to a bloody, heart-stopping confrontation . . .

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“So gripping the reader feels metaphorical hands around his throat, American Woman builds to a bloody, heart-stopping confrontation . . .

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Peter May serves up a densely plotted story of old secrets, revenge and redemption set against the ancient rhythms of the misty Hebrides.

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“The consciousness implicit in these poems resembles that of Baudelaire’s urban flaneur or city dweller musing on the life of his city and the world beyond it.

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Paisley Mischief is too cliche to be a great novel, but it is written with enough wit to make it a fun novel.

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“Not only is Hell with the Lid Blown Off an excellent mystery, it is also a portrait of early 20th century rural America when family was more important than any other part of life.

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