Infinite Books

A blog about my adventures in reading…


“That is part of the beauty of all literature. You discover that your longings are universal longings, that you’re not lonely and isolated from anyone. You belong.”

F. Scott Fitzgerald


LATEST BOOK REVIEWS


  • “Small Worlds” by Caleb Azumah Nelson

    “Small Worlds” by Caleb Azumah Nelson

    “Small Worlds” is the second novel by a young British-Ghananian writer and photographer, Caleb Azumah Nelson. It’s a contemporary coming-of-age story of Stephen, whose family emigrated from Ghana to find a better life in England. The novel is written in a poetic, documentary style as we follow Stephen’s path to adulthood. He is a gentle

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  • “The Pole” by J.M. Coetzee

    “The Pole” by J.M. Coetzee

    “The Pole” is the second book by J.M. Coetzee I read, “Disgrace” being the first one, remaining one of my favorite novels of all time. This time, the author tells the story of love between 70-year-old Polish virtuoso pianist Witold and a 50-year-old woman, Beatriz. Beatriz is a patron of arts, living in Barcelona, and

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  • “The Raging Storm” by Ann Cleeves

    “The Raging Storm” by Ann Cleeves

    The residents of Greystone, a small fishing town in North Devon, England, like to keep their problems hidden from outsiders. But when the celebrity sailor and adventure seeker, Jem Rosco, is found dead, his body lying in a boat in the legendary and feared Scully Cove’s water, they have no choice but to accept the

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  • “Inside Information” by Eshkol Nevo

    “Inside Information” by Eshkol Nevo

    “Inside Information” is an excellent title for this novel by Eshkol Nevo. We are given three very loosely interconnected stories, all told in the first person narrative, so the reader is looking at the events from the narrator’s point of view, favoring his or her interpretation. But there are mysteries, and things may differ from

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  • “The Sunset Years of Agnes Sharp” by Leonie Swann

    “The Sunset Years of Agnes Sharp” by Leonie Swann

    “Getting old isn’t for the faint of heart,” the American movie star Mae West once said, and the residents of a senior citizens’ home share in the quaint English village of Duck End can attest to it. In addition to the common ailments of old age, they face an unexplained murder at a next-door house

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  • “Open Throat” by Henry Hoke

    “Open Throat” by Henry Hoke

    “Open Throat” by Henry Hoke is a slim but perhaps the most beautiful novel I read this year. It’s told from the perspective of a mountain lion who lives in the desert hills below the Hollywood sign. The mountain lion is queer: his lover, “the kill sharer,” was another male mountain lion. The hunt becomes

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