Tag: Book review
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“The Premonition” by Banana Yoshimoto

“The Premonition” by Banana Yoshimoto was written in 1988 but has only been translated into English by Asa Yoneda. It’s a short novel, a coming-of-age story of nineteen-year-old Yayoi, who has a premonition that something significant happened in her childhood. She feels her loving parents may not be her biological parents and is strangely drawn…
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“The Upstairs Delicatessen” by Dwight Garner

Dear reader, consider yourself to be warned – while reading “The Upstairs Delicatessen,” you’ll undoubtedly, at some point, head to the kitchen to eat either a slice of cheese or a piece of chocolate or even feel strangely invigorated to make yourself a pasta dish or whip up a favorite cake. This excellent book by…
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“The Wonderful World of James Herriot” by James Herriot

I’m a big fan of two British series, “All Creatures Great and Small,” the older one from 1978 and the new, beautiful 2020 remake (with the fourth season coming in January 2024.) Of course, when I saw an audiobook, “The Wonderful World of James Herriot,” a collection of original stories, I immediately wanted to listen…
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“The Future Future” by Adam Thirlwell

In Adam Thirlwell’s “The Future Future” we meet Celine, a 19-year-old, wealthy, married girl living in pre-revolution Paris when she finds herself in a problematic situation; someone is distributing pornographic pamphlets with her image, describing her habits and life. The accusations are false, but the series becomes popular, and soon, Celine is on everybody’s lips…
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“Finders Keepers” by Natalie Barelli

Rose, the 23-year-old protagonist of “Finders Keepers,” is one of those female characters that I instinctively like. She’s a mixture of vulnerability, a survivor of a challenging childhood, and a girl who blames herself to the point of believing she might be a psychopath. Judging from her recollection of the past, a reader must be…
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“Touched” by Walter Mosley

“Touched,” the new novel by Walter Mosley, recognized mainly by his crime novels, is rooted in our fear for the future of humans and our planet. It finally happens: the different beings from “a vast range of planes and realities,” as the author suggests, have decided that our species has entered the stage when our…
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“Murder on Mistletoe Lane” by Debbie Young

“Murder on Mistletoe Lane” by Debbie Young is the fifth installment in Stella and Lyndy’s historical mystery series. I enjoyed listening to the first four novels, and this was the first one I read on paper, happily discovering that it’s as charming as the audiobooks. Stella, a wealthy American heiress, and her aristocratic Viscount husband…
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“Wandering through Life” by Donna Leon

Comissario Brunetti is one of my favorite mystery characters, and for years I enthusiastically followed him on the streets of Venice. So when I learned that Donna Leon wrote a memoir, I got excited to learn more about the woman who created not only Brunetti but also Paula, Signorina Elettra, Vianello, and Patta. I knew…
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“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” 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…