Tag Archive > Fiction

Waiting by Ha Jin

This is a beautiful book written by Ha Jin.  It takes place in China.  Lin Kong is a doctor who spends his years working in a military compound, away from his wife who is caring for his parents and raising their daughter in his village.  Lin Kong had married in an arranged marriage as a [...]

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Half Broke Horses by Jeannette Walls

Half Broke Horses is a second book written by Jeannette Walls.  Her first book was a memoir where she detailed her nomadic childhood and the colorful parents and siblings that she has.  Half Broke Horses is sort of a prequel in that it tells the story of her grandmother, Lily Casey, but in first person [...]

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The Pact by Jodi Picoult

Jodi Picoult is an author that has become very popular over the past years for writing good books about sensitive topics such as school violence, sexual abuse and religion.  The Pact was written over ten years ago and focuses on teenage suicide and assisted suicide. This book introduces us to two families who have lived [...]

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Snow Falling On Cedars by David Guterson

I had first read Snow Falling on Cedars over ten years ago.  My memory was that the book was beautifully written to the point where you could clearly visualize the characters and the setting, more so than in most books.  I just re-read it and still feel that it is a beautiful book. This story [...]

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Bee Season by Myla Goldberg

It is interesting to me how spelling bees suddenly became the focus of books and movies several years ago.  I watched Spellbound and found the kids who compete in the national spelling bee fascinating…as well as their families.  Bee Season came out a year or two before that movie (2000) and also centers around spelling [...]

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The Drowning Tree by Carol Goodman

The Drowning Tree followed along similar paths as Carol Goodman’s other books.  It is based at an all girls school, in this case Penrose College, and it leans heavily on mythology, literature and art.  Carol Goodman uses a lot of references to mythology to move her story along.  She writes mystery novels that are complex [...]

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The Vision of Emma Blau by Ursula Hegi

Along the lines of dreams and visions, this book by Ursula Hegi follows the main character from Germany to the United States when he immigrates at age 13, alone, to follow his dreams.  Stefan Blau yearns for America so much that he leaves his home and family and begins to scratch out a living.  Initially [...]

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The Lacuna by Barbara Kingsolver

The past two months have been good reading months for me as a lot of the authors that I love have new(er) books out.  It had been so long since Barbara Kingsolver’s last book that I had stopped looking for one.  I was first introduced to her, as many were, through The Poisonwood Bible.  While [...]

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This Charming Man by Marian Keyes

I’m not usually a huge fan of “chick lit” authors, but Marian Keyes is one that I have always enjoyed.  Her characters are lively and there is typically something going on in her books that is a little more serious.  In some of her books there are women who are widowed, facing drug problems or [...]

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How To Talk To A Widower by Jonathan Tropper

How to Talk to a Widower is both funny and heartbreaking.  Doug Parker is 29-years-0ld and has been widowed for about a year after his 40-year-old wife, Haley, died in a plane crash.  Doug is stuck in a place where his grief is still fresh with each day yet the world is expecting him to [...]

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