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In David Guterson’s New Novel, a Criminal Trial Is All in the Family

Tuesday, January 11, 2022 - 6:00am
By Scott Turow
“The Final Case” interrogates a father-son relationship alongside a family in crisis.
Source: NY Times Book Reviews


What Unites Buddhism and Psychotherapy? One Therapist Has the Answer.

Tuesday, January 11, 2022 - 5:00am
By Oliver Burkeman
In “The Zen of Therapy,” Mark Epstein weaves together two ways of understanding how humans can feel more settled in their lives.
Source: NY Times Book Reviews


Mother and Daughter, Separated in Parallel Universes

Tuesday, January 11, 2022 - 5:00am
By Caitlin Horrocks
“Present Tense Machine,” a novel by Gunnhild Øyehaug, considers two lives, and a familial bond, abruptly rerouted.
Source: NY Times Book Reviews


Jami Attenberg’s Memoir Is a Portrait of the Artist as a Born Writer

Tuesday, January 11, 2022 - 5:00am
By Claire Dederer
In “I Came All This Way to Meet You,” the novelist reveals how far she’s traveled — and how many obstacles she’s cleared — to get where she is now.
Source: NY Times Book Reviews


Is There a Silver Lining to Loss? This Memoir Shows Its Shimmer.

Tuesday, January 11, 2022 - 5:00am
By Robin Romm
In “Lost & Found,” Kathryn Schulz explores the confluence of death, love and hope.
Source: NY Times Book Reviews


He Can See the Future, but Can’t Escape It

Tuesday, January 11, 2022 - 5:00am
By Marcela Valdes
In “Call Me Cassandra,” by Marcial Gala, a young man’s visions make his tortured existence more bearable, but also constrain him.
Source: NY Times Book Reviews


In ‘Yonder,’ Escape From Slavery Comes With a Magical Twist

Tuesday, January 11, 2022 - 5:00am
By Vanessa Riley
The idea of something within sight but just out of reach is at the core of Jabari Asim’s new novel, which follows a group of enslaved people living in 1852.
Source: NY Times Book Reviews


A Fateful Train Ride Connects Eras and Cultures in This Novel

Tuesday, January 11, 2022 - 5:00am
By Tarashea Nesbit
Jonathan Evison’s novel “Small World” follows the lives of several travelers and their 19th-century ancestors.
Source: NY Times Book Reviews


'The Latinist' is an academic suspense story, with just a touch of Agatha Christie

Monday, January 10, 2022 - 1:38pm
By Maureen Corrigan

Set in the claustrophobic world of academia, Mark Prins' debut novel is saturated with references to Classical mythology and, like the best thrillers, is ingenious in its sinister simplicity.

Source: NPR Book Reviews


The Monogram Murders

Monday, January 10, 2022 - 10:41am

UnCovered review by Kate Snyder, ACLS Pleasantville Branch

Who doesn’t love a good mystery? Sophie Hannah delivers with The Monogram Murders. With the permission of the Agatha Christie estate, she has resurrected the Belgian detective, Hercule Poirot.  Poirot, enjoying a cup of rich coffee at his favorite coffee house, witnesses a woman stumble in terrified. She tells him someone is trying to kill her and, when he does, justice will be served. Poirot is not to try to find her killer. Later he learns of three people poisoned at a posh London hotel, each with a monogramed cufflink in their mouth. Is it suicide? Murder and back to suicide again? There are more plot twists here than a tangled jumble of holiday lights. As usual, Poirot sums everything up at the end with a somewhat plausible explanation.

Sophie Hannah does Christie proud in bringing back to life Hercule Poirot and his “little gray cells, mon amie.” I found this book an easy read and great fun and look forward to her next Poirot novel, Closed Casket. 

Source: UnCovered Reviews


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phone: (609) 625-2776 | fax: (609) 625-8143

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