Tag: book review
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The Burning Bride [Book Review]
Trish MacEnulty’s novel The Burning Bride sparkles with a high-energy plot and tight, precise prose. And what makes the book especially fascinating is the carefully researched details of early 20th-century New York City and St. Augustine. Read more
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Privilege [Book Review]
In the prologue of this fast-paced and beautifully written mystery novel, country girl Ruby Randolph–whose boyfriend Billy has been arrested and whose trailer has been burned down–shows up homeless, barefoot and braless at criminal defense attorney Gardner Randolph’s office. Read more
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Bluer and More Vast [Book Review]
Michael Hettich is an extraordinary poet. In his two most recent collections, To Start an Orchard and Bluer and More Vast, Hettich’s brilliance shines brightly. What especially makes his work vibrant is his unique blend of vividly capturing the everyday quotidian moments of his narrators and characters and mixing these flashes with a unique and… Read more
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The Feral Condition [Book Review]
Using a backdrop of four starkly different locales, Gaylord Brewer crafts a journey replete with fables of a man observing and interacting with the natural world, before coming to terms with his own “ferality.” Through language and imagery both striking and candid, Brewer writes to discover and convey universal truths from his observations of the… Read more
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Avenue of Champions [Book Review]
In Clay Blancett’s first novel Avenue of Champions the reader is taken on a fascinating odyssey through, not Homer’s Mediterranean Sea, but the streets and back alleys of Richmond, Virginia. Read more
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Here on Rue Morgue Avenue [Book Review]
The poet Cynie Cory springs word-songs like hot hail from the sky in Here on Rue Morgue Avenue, a collection of almost-sonnets, almost cantos, that grab language by the gills, that fling stanzas skyward into a fiery stratosphere. Read more
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Particularly Dangerous Situation [Book Review]
The start of this Alabama odyssey, a novella, is told in a melodic and cyclical way. Yet its content is both and neither. The story is specific and general, told by eight tattered, deranged people. The reader relies on what these characters have or may not have seen because of a barrage of enormous, surreal,… Read more
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The Hacks of Life [Book Reviews]
Author Perry Busby in his novel, The Hacks of Life, transports the reader back to the year 1993. His character, Phil Jacobson, a young, African American programmer lands a prized position at a computer company, Intellect Technology, Inc. (ITI). Read more