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Author: Gena

The Bookshop of Yesterdays

The Bookshop of Yesterdays

The Bookshop of Yesterdays by Amy Meyerson, set in Prospero Books in LA, is a mystery uncovered one clue at a time that dragged on a bit too long. Miranda returns home for her Uncle’s funeral, who she hasn’t seen since she was 12, and finds that he left her his bookstore. Through the scavenger hunt he has left for her, each clue in a different book, she sets out to discover long kept family secrets There are moments when…

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The Possibility of Everything

The Possibility of Everything

The Possibility of Everything, A Memoir by Hope Edelman, author of Motherless Daughters is a book that takes place over a couple of weeks when Edelman’s daughter Maya was 3 years old. When Maya suddenly starts exhibiting alarming and often violent behavior, in a quest to find a cure for her, she and her husband take Maya to visit a shaman in Belize; this is a chronicle of that journey. It was hard for me to understand Edelman, she was…

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A Long Petal of the Sea

A Long Petal of the Sea

A Long Petal of the Sea by Isabelle Allende is historic fiction set in Spain during the Civil War and following a couple on the SS Winnipeg, a boat chartered by Pablo Neruda, as they emigrate to Chile at the start of WWII. Although not my favorite of Allende’s books, it’s still full of her usual charm, interesting characters and masterful storytelling. I learned a lot of things I didn’t know about Spanish refugees at that time and what life…

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Bowlaway

Bowlaway

Bowlaway by Elizabeth McCraken is set in New England at the turn of the twentieth century. Full of all sorts of unusual characters starting with Bertha Truitt who appears out of nowhere passed out in the cemetery one day with nothing but a bowling ball, a candle pin and some bars of gold. From there the story unfurls and twists and turns and comes back on itself eventually through several generations of Truitts. McCraken’s writing is truly original, an unexpected…

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City of Girls

City of Girls

City of Girls is the new novel by Elizabeth Gilbert. It follows Vivian, a young, spoiled, naive girl who moves to NYC in the 1940’s and begins making costumes at a local theater. The parts describing her life as a seamstress I found really interesting. Otherwise, I found her shallow and boring and just not that original. Gilbert gives the reader a glimpse into the life of a showgirl in NYC at that time, but I still found this book…

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The Starless Sea

The Starless Sea

The Starless Sea by Erin Morgenstern, author of The Night Circus, is another book that takes the reader on a magical journey. This time through a magic door to an underground world full of books and stories and of bees and honey, keys and crowns and of course The Starless Sea. Morgenstern is a master of creating a fantasy world that the reader wants to live inside and not come out of, and in that sense this book doesn’t disappoint….

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Educated

Educated

Educated:A Memoir by Tara Westover is the best memoir Ive read since The Glass Castle. Raised in Idaho by a family of survivalists who stockpiled food and guns, preparing for the end of the world, never letting their kids go to the doctor or go to school, Westover didn’t even have a birth certificate until she was 9 years old. Her Father was a bi-polar owner of a scrapyard, her Mother a midwife and healer, her older brother was violent…

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The Broken Earth Trilogy

The Broken Earth Trilogy

The Broken Earth Trilogy: The Fifth Season, The Obelisk Gate, The Stone Sky by N.K. Jemisin is a collection of Sci-fi fantasy unlike anything I’ve ever read. Jemisin so completely creates and populates a new world in the future, where all the rules of survival have changed, it took me most of the first book to entirely grasp it. I actually found this tiresome at first, but am glad that I stuck with it. By the final book I couldn’t…

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Girl, Woman, Other

Girl, Woman, Other

Girl, Woman, Other by Bernadine Evaristo is an incredible novel told through the voices of twelve separate modern, black British women. Their stories are each personal and unique, yet they overlap just enough to keep a thread running through the entire narrative. This book blew me away; although each vastly different, Evaristo showed the inter-connectedness of all her characters, highlighting issues of gender, race, sexuality, class, family, and culture. One of the best books I’ve read in ages, I didn’t…

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Red at the Bone

Red at the Bone

Red at the Bone is the new novel by Jacqueline Woodson, author of Brown Girl Dreaming. Written in sparse, lyrical, poetic prose, Woodson tells the story of Melody, 16 years old at her coming of age party, as her family looks back on the same event that was meant to be celebrated for her mother 15 years earlier. Told in different voices, moving back and forth through time, Woodson writes about issues of family, race, culture, identity, place. Masterfully written…

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