Robert Hough’s Dr. Brinkley’s Tower (2012)

2020-08-19T08:27:48-04:00

In which I chat about reading Dr. Brinkley's Tower in a single day. (You can't build a tower that quickly, but you can read about it.) Admittedly, I shuffled this volume amongst my stack of current reads for weeks before I started reading. (There is always a book in there that

Robert Hough’s Dr. Brinkley’s Tower (2012)2020-08-19T08:27:48-04:00

Jane Harris’ Gillespie and I (2012)

2023-10-12T11:21:19-04:00

No need to wonder whether you fit in this novel: Harriet Baxter is speaking directly to you, Reader. Even before the novel has properly begun, she is saying "Reader, if you wonder -- as I suspect you may..." Even though you weren't wondering yet. And, on the next page, she

Jane Harris’ Gillespie and I (2012)2023-10-12T11:21:19-04:00

María Dueñas’ The Time In Between (2011)

2014-03-15T19:29:28-04:00

The Time In Between is essential reading for those who thought that reading about the Spanish Civil War meant Hemingway and Orwell. In her lush and sprawling novel, María Dueñas presents the era via the perspective of  "an independent woman in difficult times". There was no room for a seamstress like

María Dueñas’ The Time In Between (2011)2014-03-15T19:29:28-04:00

But But But

2014-03-09T14:45:52-04:00

Barbara Kingsolver's The Lacuna Harper Collins, 2008 Both Kingsolver and Waters are on my MRE lists. Some of their books are amongst my ATF (All Time Favourites) and even when I'm less fond of a theme or a set of characters in their works I still enjoy the books because

But But But2014-03-09T14:45:52-04:00
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