Tag: literary fiction
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Book Review – The God of the Woods by Liz Moore

It’s 1975 and summer camp at a remote preserve in the Adirondack mountains, Northeastern New York, is drawing towards a close. Then one of the teenagers, Barbara, goes missing. But she isn’t just any camper, she is the daughter of the affluent Van Laar family, whose picturesque lands of forests and lakes around their grand…
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Book Review – Private Rites by Julia Armfield

Isla, Irene and Agnes. Three sisters with a fractured relationship and tetchy dynamic, drawn back together after their father’s death. Navigating a city of perpetual rain, where the dead can’t be buried or they will actually rise again, the sisters move through, and exist in, this sodden landscape; a place where the daily produce many…
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Book Review – The Safekeep by Yael van der Wouden

It’s the 1960s in a rural part of The Netherlands and Isabel lives alone in a large, rambling house, her mother dead and her brothers Hendrik and Louis off living their own lives. Always a solitary soul and an outsider, she becomes inextricably linked to the house, its walls and contents all tangible links to…
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Book Review – The All-Night Sun by Diane Zinna

Lauren, a writing teacher just outside Washington D.C, is drifting through life, still grieving the sudden loss of her parents years earlier. An attentive, engaged teacher and friend to everyone in class, outside class she is unanchored and alone. While teaching her international class, she meets a kindred spirit in Siri, a young, charismatic Swedish…
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Book Review – The Divorcées by Rowan Beaird

It’s 1950s America and Lois, in her 20s, is making her way west. Stuck in a loveless marriage, Nevada’s laws will allow her a quick, clean divorce. All she has to do is be resident there for six weeks. So she spends her weeks at the Golden Yarrow, one of the more upmarket ‘divorce ranches’…
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Book Review – Memory Piece by Lisa Ko

Memory Piece is the story of three Asian American women, Giselle, Jackie and Ellen, whose lives collide in a small moment of rebellion when they are teenage girls searching for more from life, and they continue to go in and out of each other’s lives, in person and digitally, for over half a century. From…
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Fourteen Days – ed. by Margaret Atwood and Douglas Preston

Fourteen days: the period over which our novel unfolds, as the tenants of one run-down New York apartment block gather (with social distancing!) each evening on the rooftop, in the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic, to cheer on the frontline workers and then share, and listen to, stories drawn from their own experience. We…


