Published Reviews
|
Kirkus reviews
This delightfully droll fairy tale features a feisty milkmaid named Lucy and her best friend, Prince Wynston. Wynston has been forced to swap berry-picking...
Read More »
|
Publisher's Weekly reviews
After covering Hollywood's cutting-edge directors (Rebels on the Backlot), former New York Times correspondent Waxman embarks on a grand tour of some of the world'...
Read More »
|
|
Library Journal reviews
The third title in the ArtPlace series continues the publisher’s mission to incorporate biography, art and history into travel guides. This well-researched volume...
Read More »
|
Ink19.com reviews
The Transcendentalist movement centered on the Boston area, and its members are a Who�s Who of American letters - Hawthorn, Alcott, Thoreau, and Emerson are the...
Read More »
|
|
Offbeattravel.com reviews
Another in the ArtPlace Series of books, A Journey Into Ireland’s Literary Revival takes you on a guided tour of the places and times of some of Ireland’s most...
Read More »
|
suite1010.com reviews
R. Todd Felton’s A Journey into Ireland’s Literary Revival is a fascinating and well-written account of the rebirth in Irish literary between the 1890s and the...
Read More »
|
|
Gadling.com reviews
I've already mentioned how much I love the Roaring Forties ArtPlace series, but I won't apologize for saying it again. The latest creative guide in this fantastic...
Read More »
|
Celtic Connection reviews
Once in a great while events, trends and people propel periods of remarkable enlightenment, firming up hope in our better natures. The Irish Literary Revival, one...
Read More »
|
|
www.corpse.org reviews
"This is one of our poets and we stand behind him (or to his side) in any fight, physical or literary, he might be involved in. Except maybe the situation he...
Read More »
|
JustOneMoreBook.com reviews
Full page, personality-packed portraits, deceptively adorable sketched studies and frank, enthusiastic poems reveal the charm and distinct characters of sixteen...
Read More »
|
|
The Ottawa Citizen reviews
Peep, which can instantly evoke images of transparency, transgression and totalitarianism, is all about contradictions, he concludes.
For good or ill, it's almost...
Read More »
|
|
|
Oregonian Review reviews
by Hope Edelman
Among children's counselors, there is a saying: As it goes for the mother, so it goes for the child. This is neither the exclusionary nor blame-based statement...
Read More »
|
The Compulsive Reader reviews
Clampitt's warm, evocative and open-hearted writing soon won me over. She has a particular gift for describing the natural world and her accounts of rainforests,...
Read More »
|
|
Let's Book It reviews
by Libby Cone
Wow .... just wow. You know that feeling when your partner hands you a gift and it's in a really little package and you know it is going to be an expensive and...
Read More »
|
Library Journal reviews
by Vicki Delany
Starred Review. The successful search for a missing boy in the woods near the British Columbian town of Trafalgar also uncovers a human bone that may belong to a...
Read More »
|
|
Live To Read reviews
"There is plenty of action and excitement in the pages of this novel, the book is hard to put down."
Live To Read
Read More »
|
The Paris Voice reviews
In her beautiful new novel, “The Radiant City,” Canadian writer Lauren B. Davis evokes a Paris that is decidedly on the edge, a city in which everyone has come...
Read More »
|
|
electricliterature.com reviews
by Lou Beach
“Hello! I must be dying.”
In Lou Beach’s debut collection of minuscule flash fiction, 420 Characters, the title gives away the gimmick at a glance, and the...
Read More »
|
Publisher's Weekly reviews
Teacher, freelance writer and first-time author Leleux proves he’s already a master of the snappy one-liner and the improbably hilarious in this rollicking, bitter...
Read More »
|

















