Book 108: Agnes Grey – Anne Brontë
A love story to make you smile. I thoroughly enjoyed reading Agnes Grey and although it was somewhat predictable, I felt […]
Book 108: Agnes Grey – Anne Brontë Read Post »
A love story to make you smile. I thoroughly enjoyed reading Agnes Grey and although it was somewhat predictable, I felt […]
Book 108: Agnes Grey – Anne Brontë Read Post »
Yesterday I wrote about reading my first Advance Reader’s Copy of a novel and promised the review and here it
Book 99: The Land of Decoration – Grace McCleen Read Post »
As the final novel I could not have asked for a better ending to the informal trilogy. Another ten years
Book 85: Jo’s Boys – Louisa May Alcott Read Post »
I’ll confess that I am back dating this post. I finished reading this the third week in December, but never
Book 84: Little Men – Louisa May Alcott Read Post »
There are few books that I finish reading and truly regret not having read them earlier in life, and this
Book 81: Little Women – Louisa May Alcott Read Post »
A friend in undergrad recommended I read this novel and I’m sad it took me this long to read it. The Namesake is one of the most beautifully and eloquently written novels I have read this year, if not ever.
There is something so simple and yet strikingly intricate in Lahiri’s prose. I can only compare her to the lyrical like prose I’ve read from many Irish authors. I found myself repeating sentences in my head because of their artful construction. The foreign names, foods, and customs interwoven with the familiar places and customs created a story I couldn’t put down. I’ve compared Jhumpa Lahiri to Jane Austen, in the ordinariness of what she writes and her style, and I stand by this, but it is the lives and deaths—the full picture, rather than the snapshot—at which Lahiri excels.
Book 69: The Namesake – Jhumpa Lahiri Read Post »
I’m not sure how to review this book. I’m surprised I’ve not heard more about it, but simultaneously not in
Book 51: The Finkler Question – Howard Jacobson Read Post »
What a peculiar novel. I had to slog through this book and at various times was convinced it was repeating
Book 43: A Confederacy of Dunces – John Kennedy Toole Read Post »
I purchased this book with the 13 or 14 others at the Boston Book Festival last year in a bag
Book 42: Gilead – Marilynne Robinson Read Post »