1. Book Reviews
  2. Books Published March 2012

March 2012

Here are all of the books we've reviewed that were published March 2012.

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Book Review

Call Me Sonja

by Donna Russo Morin

There were few places as glamorous as Cannes, France, in the early twentieth century, and few women as lovely and mysterious as a Russian princess. For Princess Samaroff’s young daughter, Sonja, meeting American Norman Carey was... Read More

Book Review

Princess Bendy

by Colby Cedar Smith

Four year-old Caitlin can do amazing tricks with her bones. She can bend her thumb to touch her wrist. She can fold her fingers backward and her elbows in the wrong direction. Occasionally, however, Caitlin bends her bones by accident,... Read More

Book Review

The Battle For America

by Mark G. McLaughlin

Through his faith in God and years in the United States Marine Corps, William G. Lord was fortunate enough “to leave behind the pain of isolation caused by poverty.” That others seek to rise from poverty without a strong faith in... Read More

Book Review

Tin Can

by Jill Allen

"Tin Can", Colin Noble’s debut novel, rolls along as jauntily as its titular ship, introducing young readers to a fun and exciting futuristic world. Think Star Trek, but with kids in charge. In 2048, the Edwards family—father Dave,... Read More

Book Review

Viral Games

by Sheila M. Trask

Who would want to kill Anita Tavares, the representative of a world-famous AIDS charity based in Stockholm? What was she hiding in the luggage that went missing on her trip to the Dominican Republic? How did French journalist Mathieu... Read More

Book Review

When We Were Young

by Cheryl M. Hibbard

Presented as a family saga and historical romance, "When We Were Young" spans the years from WWII forward, focusing on Mitchell family member Jim and the numerous women in his life. The story follows Jim from his youth in wartime England... Read More

Book Review

The Necklace

by Julia Ann Charpentier

Envision the turbulent times depicted in Margaret Mitchell’s Gone with the Wind, a classic that has been romanticized despite the portrayal of blatant racism and sexism, but substitute Meiji-era Japan for Civil War America. "The... Read More

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