Published Reviews
|
Time Out Delhi reviews
The Chinese philosopher Zhuangzi identified a fundamental confusion when he related a dream in which he was a butterfly. On awakening, he wondered if he was...
Read More »
|
Time Out Delhi reviews
The Chinese philosopher Zhuangzi identified a fundamental confusion when he related a dream in which he was a butterfly. On awakening, he wondered if he was...
Read More »
|
|
Wilde Oats reviews
Cakewalk, by Nathan Burgoine is about a man organising a party for his husband's daughter, about how the definition of family is broader than man/woman/2.1...
Read More »
|
Pridesource reviews
But it's the newcomers that give this fine book its the-future-of-queer-lit-is-good edge. Among them: Josh Helmin on high school attraction, 'Nathan Burgoine on...
Read More »
|
|
Xtra! reviews
Burgoine has another take. "Here in Canada," he says, "I would say the queer male condition is one of change. In my life, I've seen such amazing strides — gay...
Read More »
|
LA Times reviews
by Jon Clinch
The power of KINGS OF THE EARTH lies in the intricacies of the relationships among the Proctors; neighbor and childhood friend Preston, who serves as something of...
Read More »
|
|
The Washington Post reviews
by Jon Clinch
This is the kind of fiction we should be reading. "Kings of the Earth" is eloquent and moving, written with precision and clarity to stave off loss -- the loss of...
Read More »
|
Publishers Weekly reviews
Davis's sincere latest (after Walking the Dog) is a tale of violence and literary redemption set in Africa. The narrator, a local nicknamed the Barefoot Librarian...
Read More »
|
|
Library Journal reviews
Set in war-ravaged Sudan, this novel depicts three people on the run from the Warriors of God: the narrator, a black African, reader of Western novels, itinerant...
Read More »
|
Kirkus reviews
A novel of evasion and pursuit, set in Africa and written in the spare, allegorical style of Davis’ first novel, Walk on, Bright Boy (2007).
The unnamed narrator...
Read More »
|
|
Kirkus Indie reviews
Speller explores the intersections of race, sex, violence, and art in this experimental poetry collection… Many of these poems use dialogue as their...
Read More »
|
BarnesandNoble.com reviews
www.barnesandnoble.com/reviewAccidental Cowgirl: Six Cows, No Horse and No Clue by Mary Lynn Archibald(Paperback)Customer Rating for this product is 5 out of 5 A...
Read More »
|
|
Blog Business World reviews
For me, the power of the book is how Donna Ballman presents the relevant employment law, for the various phases of an employee's career, in an clear and no...
Read More »
|
DNA reviews
TEN pages into Beyond The Newsroom and a huge cinematic screen takes over your mind. The pages fade and you see Ram Gopal Varma’s name bursting on to a screen....
Read More »
|
|
Pares Cum Paribus, No. 4, 1997 reviews
by Robert Sward
UNIVERSIDAD DE CHILE
FACULTAD DE CIENCIAS SOCIALES PARES CUM PARIBUS No. 4
OTOÑO 1997
Lawrence Lieberman
Robert Sward: Una mística de los objetos
Para revelar el...
Read More »
|
KCET.org reviews
"Award-winning poet and UCLA English Professor Harryette Mullen is the subject of a compelling chapter; she also provided the inspiration for Shockley's title '...
Read More »
|
|
The Michigan Poet reviews
The poems in Folk Concert: Changing Times span many subjects, places and time; where one poem recalls a childhood camping trip, another revisits an adult life full...
Read More »
|
Mrs.Giggles.com reviews
Jessica Inclán's Reason To Believe was previously released in trade paperback format back in 2006. It has been given a sexier cover more in vogue with the current...
Read More »
|
|
Publishers' Weekly reviews
"Powerful. . .Bohjalian’s storytelling makes this a beautiful, frightening, and unforgettable read."
Read More »
|
Roundtable Reviews reviews
by W.L. Hoffman
Clocking in at fewer than three hundred pages, THE FIRST MOTHER’S FIRE is a quick read and never overstays its welcome like more than a few ponderous fantasy books...
Read More »
|
















