1. Book Reviews
  2. Books with 229 Pages

Reviews of Books with 229 Pages

Here are all of the books we've reviewed that have 229 pages.

Book Review

A Mindful Life

by Andrea Hammer

Encouraging transformation in the search for inner peace, "A Mindful Life" is a thoughtful self-help book. Tom Dickerson’s ranging self-help book "A Mindful Life" covers topics including mindfulness, self-awareness, serious thinking,... Read More

Book Review

The Equilibrist III

by Kristine Morris

Erasmus Cromwell-Smith II’s "The Equilibrist III" brings a series honoring two unusual, gifted people and their abiding love to a satisfying close. Erasmus Cromwell-Smith II’s The Equilibrist, Part III: The Quibbler continues the... Read More

Book Review

Grace Revealed

by Philip J. Kowalski

"Grace Revealed" is a religious self-help work that aims to help relieve the anxiety of those in pain. Fred Sievert’s religious primer "Grace Revealed" focuses on the religious phenomenon of grace through the death and resurrection of... Read More

Book Review

All Those Tears We Can't See

by Claire Foster

All Those Tears We Can’t See is a dramatic, cross-cultural coming-of-age novel set between two very different worlds. In Gita Audhya’s passionate multigenerational drama All Those Tears We Can’t See, a young woman navigates the... Read More

Book Review

The Contaminants

by Rebecca Foster

Aboard a spacecraft, two teens hold out hope for new life on post-apocalyptic Earth in this believable YA science fiction novel. "The Contaminants", a work of dystopian fantasy for teens from Devin K. Smyth (the pen name of Kevin Speth),... Read More

Book Review

Don't Forget Me, Bro

by Rebecca Foster

The weighty themes of mental illness and abuse are skillfully balanced with a road trip plot line and observations on America’s homogenization. In YA writer John Michael Cummings’s first adult novel, Don’t Forget Me, Bro, a... Read More

Book Review

Enigma in Blue

by Annie Peters

A tale of scientific experiments and research conducted by unique, compelling characters provokes philosophical thought. In "Enigma in Blue", Klaus Bytzek creates a cast of eccentric characters who posit questions about the nature of our... Read More

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