Orange January: The Lovely Bones (2002)

2014-03-15T18:47:50-04:00

Striking cover, no? Alice Sebold's novel was longlisted for the Orange Prize in 2003, the year that Valerie Martin's Property won the prize. A friend of mine was so excited about The Lovely Bones, that she bought it as soon as it was available in paperback, and I've

Orange January: The Lovely Bones (2002)2014-03-15T18:47:50-04:00

Unwritten: The Antagonist

2014-03-15T16:14:33-04:00

Lynn Coady's The Antagonist House of Anansi, 2011 The protagonist in The Antagonist is Rank. Actually, Gordon Rankin. But he's insisted, since he was twelve years old, that his friends call him Rank. Now it occurs to him that he's been instructing people to call him stinky, but that's not

Unwritten: The Antagonist2014-03-15T16:14:33-04:00

Mending: The Sisters Brothers

2017-07-25T11:29:33-04:00

Unforgettable design, no? Patrick deWitt's The Sisters Brothers House of Anansi, 2011 So I'm chatting about this book, about the scene with the 'dentist', and I announce that I agree that it's unfair that he doesn't get paid for his 'services', but dismiss it quickly by saying that

Mending: The Sisters Brothers2017-07-25T11:29:33-04:00

Louise Doughty’s Whatever You Love (2010)

2014-03-13T20:34:07-04:00

Louise Doughty’s Whatever You Love London: Faber & Faber, 2010 (Looking for a swallow rather than a full glass? ORANGE Squirt below.) Readers fall hard into Louise Doughty’s sixth novel. The emotional intensity in Whatever You Love is pervasive: even when the root of that intensity is character rather than

Louise Doughty’s Whatever You Love (2010)2014-03-13T20:34:07-04:00
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