Published Reviews
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The Boston Globe reviews
"With her fourth and most emotionally textured novel, Graver proves herself a master chronicler of the ever-spiraling human comedy. The End of the Point is a work...
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Goodreads.com reviews
by Andrew Q Lam
Andrew Lam, one of my favorite writers, has often demonstrated his journalist's ability to see the broad themes in the most particular of situations. He is...
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Elisa Reviews reviews
Sure there is a bittersweet aftertaste all along the anthology, something that, truth be told, I have always found when reading stories related to trains… there...
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LoveLaughter Till Eternity reviews
The book attempts to enlarge the vision of people who want to help children cope with the wide range of emotions that may lead to depression, following a...
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Universidad de las Americas reviews
Nuestra reseña ensayÌstica traducida y publicada con el TOMO “LA LISTA DE OFENSAS” MARAVILLOSA NOVELA DE NUESTRA AMIGA, LA ESCRITURA UNIVERSAL, DLIRUBA Z. ARA.
A...
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800cl reviews
Poco y nada sabemos por estos lares de la literatura bengalí. Por eso, la sola llegada de un titulo de tan remotos confines llama la atención.
La Lista de...
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Various reviews
Here are some of the reviews for my debut novel A List of Offences. It's currently available for Kindle, and is soon to be a print book, as well.
“In ...
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Lambda Literary reviews
by Urvashi Vaid
The first line of Urvashi Vaid’s new book Irresistible Revolution: Confronting Race, Class and the Assumptions of LGBT Politics (Magnus Books) is enough to...
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Kirkuk Reviews reviews
by Mary Wallace
The moving story of a woman holding on to romance while trying to save her troubled lover.
An ambitious work, Wallace’s debut novel tackles difficult subjects,...
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http://www.literarydeathmatch.com/upcoming-events/la-ep-19.html reviews
"Zabrisky was a bright light of wow, the way she performed a gorgeous story to music, in way-high heels, and shouted into the microphone while waving a fist in...
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Examiner.com reviews
by Andrew Q Lam
Stories about immigration to the United States are always compelling for the enourmous fears faced and challenges overcome by the young and old....
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Library Journal reviews
Humans have always had a desire to fly. From Leonardo da Vinci and his studies and drawings of flight to Orville and Wilbur Wright's flying machine to Amelia...
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The Sierra Club reviews
by Karen Dionne
"Boiling Point features an eccentric group of characters — including two microbiologists, a celebrity figure, and a Nobel-winning scientist intent on destroying...
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Publishers Weekly reviews
by Naseem Rakha
The Crying Tree Naseem Rakha. Broadway, $22.95 (304p) ISBN 978-0-7679-3140-3
This complex, layered story of a family's journey toward justice and forgiveness comes...
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BookTrib Review Crew reviews
Five Stars!
Three cheers for Christopher Meeks and his wildly entertaining picaresque novel about the gentle, bumbling hero physicist Gunnar Gunderson’s quest for...
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BookPage reviews
September’s best paperback releases for reading groups include new books from Lorrie Moore, Elizabeth Rosner and Hilary Mantel.
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Publishers Weekly reviews
by Weston Ochse
"God speaks through odd prophets in this schizophrenic tale, which won Ochse a 2005 first novel Stoker Award. Hideously disfigured Maxom Phinxs, known as the “...
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BOOKLIST ONLINE reviews
by Thaisa Frank
The title of this collection hints at its contents—delectable stories with touches of the surreal as well as many plot twists and surprises. From short-short story...
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http://lishost.org/~hpplblog/reads/?p=701 reviews
Wells can tell a story and, as anyone who has read her Ya-Ya books knows, she’ll take you from laughter to tears to anger and back to laughter in a heartbeat. She...
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The Statesman reviews
There’s a saying in Hindi which goes: dhobi ka kutta, na ghar ka, na ghat ka. The washerman's dog doesn't know where he belongs, whether at home or at the ghats...
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