Megan Abbott’s The Fever (2014)

2014-06-17T12:37:20-04:00

Paradoxically, the phenomenon in The Fever has a chilling effect on characters and readers alike. The girls fall to the ground, one after the next; they writhe and tensions rise but blood is chilled. Little Brown & Company, 2014 “As Deenie walked out, a coolness began to sink

Megan Abbott’s The Fever (2014)2014-06-17T12:37:20-04:00

Polly Dugan’s So Much a Part of You (2014)

2014-07-15T10:21:04-04:00

Though each segment could be read as a standalone, each is So Much a Part of the Landscape that Polly Dugan's work is best read all-in-a-burst. Little Brown & Company, 2014 More trust is required on the reader's part than, say, with Carrie Snyder's more prominently linked The Juliet

Polly Dugan’s So Much a Part of You (2014)2014-07-15T10:21:04-04:00

“Soon” Alice Munro

2014-07-11T16:56:59-04:00

Readers who were left with an abundance of questions after reading "Chance" might turn to "Soon" believing that some will be answered. McClelland & Stewart, 2004 But Juliet's reappearance holds no promises of resolution; there are just as many new musings unaddressed. Most prominent are the questions outwardly posed at

“Soon” Alice Munro2014-07-11T16:56:59-04:00

On Courtney Crumrin, Lucy Knisley, and Faith Erin Hicks

2014-07-11T16:46:13-04:00

There's a new girl at school. One who hasn't heard about Courtney Crumrin and who dares to sit with her at lunch. Readers, however, are well-acquainted with Courtney by now; this is the fifth book in the series about the irrepressible girl who dares to go into dark places and

On Courtney Crumrin, Lucy Knisley, and Faith Erin Hicks2014-07-11T16:46:13-04:00

Nancy Lee’s The Age (2014)

2017-07-24T14:33:54-04:00

Do you hear it when you look at the cover of Nancy Lee’s debut novel? Cue the music: “This is the dawning of….” The Age. It is an unusual title which manages to feel both like a fragment and an expansive concept. If readers do think of the song from

Nancy Lee’s The Age (2014)2017-07-24T14:33:54-04:00
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