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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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The Affairs of the Falcons

The Affairs of the Falcons

The Affairs of the Falcons is the debut novel by Peruvian author Melissa Rivero. In the novel, Ana and her family have just fled Peru for a better life in New York; being young and undocumented they have little chance for decent work and become reliant on loan sharks and less than gracious cousins. Ana goes to extraordinary lengths to try to stay in NY and keep her family together. Her husband is ready to send their kids back to…

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The Hidden Life of Trees

The Hidden Life of Trees

The Hidden Life of Trees, What They Feel, How They Communicate-Discoveries from a Secret World by ecologist Peter Wohlleben is an interesting look at the inner lives of trees and forests that are so essential to our health and the health of our planet, but in our fast paced world, we mostly take for granted. Wohlleben anthropomorphizes trees to a fault, but his intention is to describe in terms we can understand that they actually do communicate, protect their offspring…

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Brooklyn

Brooklyn

Brooklyn by Colm Toibin, is a coming of age story set in the 1950’s. Eilis is an Irish girl who comes to Brooklyn for work and finds unexpected love. It is a story that sneaks up on you slowly, as the characters develop and grow. A quiet and straightforward novel that packs an emotional punch. Eilis is torn between two countries and two men, searching for a place to call home. A beautifully written book, a great read.

The Beekeeper of Aleppo

The Beekeeper of Aleppo

The Beekeeper of Aleppo by Christy Lefteri is a sad and beautiful novel about Syrian refugees leaving their peaceful life in the countryside to escape war. Nuri is a beekeeper and his wife Afra a painter whose grief has caused her to lose her sight. Lefteri, who worked as a volunteer at a refugee camp in Athens, infuses the novel with the humanity and pain behind this crisis. As Nuri and Afra make their way through Turkey and Greece, trying…

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The Unlikely Escape of Uriah Heep

The Unlikely Escape of Uriah Heep

The Unlikely Escape of Uriah Heep by H.G. Parry is a clever, magical mystery that brings alive Dicken’s characters, among others, read straight out of the pages of books into modern day London. While they fight to stay alive the lines between fiction and reality begin to blur, and at the heart of the novel is Dicken’s scholar Charlie Sutherland and his brother. A fun, literary read, enjoyable especially for fans of Dickens. Even though I don’t consider myself a…

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Sabrina & Corina

Sabrina & Corina

Sabrina & Corina by Kali Fajardo-Anstine, an indigenous Latina woman, is a book of short stories that highlights the lives of indigenous women in the American West, specifically Colorado. They are personal, honest, unrelenting and often painful. They are also full of truth and strength, family, heritage and a sense of place. Fajardo-Anstine writes of fierce, strong, bold women. Although I found some of the subject matter depressing, the characters were so real and vividly alive I could almost hear…

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Where the Crawdads Sing

Where the Crawdads Sing

Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens is a beautiful meditation on life in the Marshlands of the North Carolina coast. It is also a coming of age story, a love story and a murder mystery. I loved Owen’s descriptions of the natural beauty of the place, it was haunting, wonderful, mysterious, sometimes scary and lonely, I felt transported there. However, I didn’t love the ending of this book. After such a long slow unfolding, everything was wrapped up too…

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