Tag: Review
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Dirty Book Club
Four women in their 30s, some sexy books, secret key necklaces, and a rollicking adventure through relationships and life.
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Pretty Powerful: Appearance, Substance, and Success
In Pretty Powerful, Eboni Williams shows she’s an absolute specialist at addressing how appearance affects women’s lives and career
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From Twinkle, With Love
Sandhya Menon is back with her sophomore novel, all about a young Indian-American filmmaker who finds unexpected love while remaking Dracula for a school festival.
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Sourdough
Does your bread sing when it’s cooking and smell like bananas and maybe have a magical history and a mind of its own? Oh, well the bread in Sourdough by Robin Sloan does all of that
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A Court of Frost and Starlight
Sarah J Maas is back with a novella that is supposed to bridge that first three ACOTAR books with a new trilogy, but it feels like she forgot she was writing fantasy.
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All of This is True
Four high-schoolers befriend their favorite novelist, but things turn dark when it becomes clear that the stories they share with her, their private confessions, are fodder for her next novel.
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Heroes for My Daughter
I love a good hero or heroine and I seek out inspirational stories on the daily. Therefore, when I found out that Brad Meltzer, famous and best-selling mystery and thriller author, had a book called Heroes for My Daughter, I knew I had to check it out.
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Unified: How Our Unlikely Friendship Gives Us Hope for a Divided Country
At a time when politics seems more divisive than ever, we can always look for more ways to come together as friends and fellow citizens.
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Our Kind of Cruelty
It’s twisted fiction, but Our Kind of Cruelty is a story you won’t be able to put down.
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My Plain Jane
The Lady Janies are back with a re-telling of the beloved Jane Eyre, complete with the brilliant author herself, ghosts, and pop culture references
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Wild Things: The Joy of Reading Children’s Literature as an Adult
What are the hidden messages in your favorite children’s books? What did CS Lewis really want to convey about Christianity in his Narnia books? How did Charlotte’s Web change the way kid talk about death?
