Books:
Archive:
Favorite Reviews:
I have reviewed many books over the years, and some reviews have been more interesting or fun to write than others. The below list were my favorites to write.
β’ Ada, or Ardor
β’ Choose Your Own Autobiography
β’ Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
β’ If Not, Winter
β’ Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell
β’ The Kid Table
β’ Like Water for Chocolate
β’ Lolita
β’ The Monk
β’ The Night Circus
β’ Oathbringer
β’ Return of the Native
β’ Rhythm of War
β’ S
β’ Things Fall Apart
β’ The Unit
β’ The Woods Are Always WatchingCategories:
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- lists
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Author Archives: Thistle
Voodoo Season, by Jewell Parker Rhodes
Marie Levant moves from Chicago to New Orleans during her medical residency. Once there, she begins to have strange dreams that haunt her, and her knowledge of the patients that come into the emergency room border on sixth sense. Indeed, … Continue reading
Posted in 2010, Adult, Prose
Tagged atmospheric, divinity, POC, RIP-worthy, speculative, WTF moments
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Seeking Sara Summers, by Susan Gabriel
Saraβs life as a middle-aged mom, wife, and teacher is thrown into upheaval when she gets breast cancer. Over the last year, sheβs fought the illness, continually apologized to her husband for being sick, and downplayed the seriousness of the … Continue reading
Little Children, by Tom Perrotta
Sarah doesnβt fit in. She takes her daughter to the playground near her home in an upper-middle class suburb, but she knows sheβs different from the other moms there. While they talk about fatigue, sex, and their daily schedules, conversation … Continue reading
Posted in 2010, Adult, Prose
Tagged favorite, gender studies, memorable, multi-read, portentous, psychology, shredded me
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And Then There Were None, by Agatha Christie
Ten strangers with guilty consciences are invited for different reasons out to Indian Island. They donβt expect to be suddenly called out on their crimes, or to begin dying off one by one. Now theyβre in a race against time, … Continue reading
Define “Normal,” by Julie Anne Peters
Antonia used to be a model student, but her troubled homelife is catching up with her and people are beginning to notice. Jazz is part of the schoolβs rebellious crowd of punks and goths, and sheβs hiding secrets of her … Continue reading
A Certain Slant of Light, by Laura Whitcomb
Helen is Light. She died over a hundred years ago and is now only kept out of a personal hell by clinging to one host after another. Invisible to the people around her, she does nothing but watch and try … Continue reading
Protected: Sundays at Tiffany’s, by James Patterson
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The Untelling, by Tayari Jones
When Aria was a child, her family was ripped apart by a car accident that killed her father and baby sister. The rest of her adolescence was spent with an older sister who just wanted to get away and a … Continue reading
An Ideal Husband, by Oscar Wilde
Because I was so sad that The Importance of Being Earnest ended so quickly, I dove right into a second play of Wildeβs that I hadnβt even planned to read right away. An Ideal Husband was different. It had less … Continue reading
The Importance of Being Earnest, by Oscar Wilde
Iβm not even going to try to describe the plot of this play. Itβs a three-act comedy full of mix-ups, mistaken identities, and romance. Absolutely delightful. I laughed and smiled all through it. The only Oscar Wilde Iβve ever read … Continue reading