Published Reviews
|
InterfaithFamily.com reviews
I Love Jewish Faces is a delightful photograph book by Debra B. Darvick. As you might expect from the title, this is a book that attempts to dispel that hurtful...
Read More »
|
pop dose reviews
by Bryant Simon
When is a cup of coffee more than just a cheap, quick pick-me-up? Pretty much always, if you’re the type of person who pays attention to where his food comes from...
Read More »
|
|
The Daily Genoshan reviews
Shifting deftly between locations as disparate as suburban Minnesota, the hills of Los Angeles, and a trailer park in Alabama, "The Brightest Moon of the Century"...
Read More »
|
www.dignityrocks.com reviews
Dignity is often defined as the quality of being worthy of esteem or respect. Self-esteem, self-regard and self-respect are all values that every child and adult...
Read More »
|
|
Various newspapers and emags reviews
by Larry Baker
The reviews for Larry Baker’s A Good Man are starting to come in and they are good, from Iowa to Florida people are impressed:
“Baker is a smart writer. That’s...
Read More »
|
Kirkus Reviews reviews
A deft and poignant exploration of reproductive choices. In spite of informative sex-education classes at her private school in New Jersey, 16-year-old Sydney...
Read More »
|
|
Publisher's Weekly reviews
Sixteen-year-old Sydney has just learned that a casual fling has left her pregnant (“I hadn't felt like I knew him well enough to remind him about the condom issue...
Read More »
|
Booklist reviews
Every Little Thing in the World.
de Gramont, Nina (Author)
Mar 2010. 288 p. Atheneum, hardcover, $16.99. (9781416980131).
Critically acclaimed adult author de...
Read More »
|
|
San Francisco Chronicle reviews
“Larson masterfully interweaves themes with the story: of water and weightlessness; of stability and rocks; of addiction, love and lying; and of waking up to new...
Read More »
|
|
The Beat reviews
"What do you get when Chick Lit intersects Chuck Palahniuk? You get relationship-based fiction with a tough, gritty edge. You get characters who aren't stock...
Read More »
|
Romantic Times Magazine reviews
by Karen Olson
Olson's skillful telling of an action-packed story makes this book difficult to put down. Four stars.
Read More »
|
|
The Agony Column reviews
Having found Michael Jasper first in Interzone, with a story he later expanded into the science fiction novel 'The Wannoshay Cycle', I pretty much expected him to...
Read More »
|
www.SuccessCommonSense.com reviews
Review of Be the Star You Are! 99 gifts for Living, Loving, Laughing, and Learning to Make a Difference by Cynthia Brian
REVIEWED by Bud Bilanch, The Common Sense...
Read More »
|
|
New York Times reviews
Life for Sugar Lacey has never been sweet. Born out of wedlock and left in the care of three dotty sisters in a small town in Arkansas, she is raised in a series...
Read More »
|
The New York Times reviews
On a sweltering Paris evening in June 1926, a 25-year-old pianist and composer from Trenton stepped out onto the stage of the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, which...
Read More »
|
|
Publishers Weekly reviews
by Alan Kaufman
"Whether the subject is parental abuse, alcoholism, or the travails of the writing life, Kaufman’s (Jew Boy; Matches) memoir violently grabs your attention,...
Read More »
|
Publishers Weekly reviews
by Kaya Oakes
Growing up, Oakes (Slanted and Enchanted) felt many a dark night of the soul, though at the time she didn’t know to call it such, and rather than turn to God,...
Read More »
|
|
Entertainment Weekly reviews
by Maria Semple
Most teens think their parents are nuts, but Bee has hard proof: emails, faxes, and FBI documents forming a disturbing portrait of her brilliant mother,...
Read More »
|
Library Journal reviews
by Jason Pinter
New York newspaper reporter Henry Parker returns in Pinter's exciting follow-up to The Mark. Living with his girlfriend and trying to bury memories of the...
Read More »
|
















