1. Book Reviews
  2. Books Published March 2013

March 2013

Here are all of the books we've reviewed that were published March 2013.

Return to Most Recent

Book Review

Most Likely to Secede

by Sheila M. Trask

March in Vermont means it’s time for starting tomato plants and attending Town Meeting. Self-sufficiency and local control: two things that life in Vermont is all about. Appropriately enough, this March will also see the launch of a... Read More

Book Review

Cragbridge Hall

by Nancy Walker

Imagine what might happen if Harry Potter and Nancy Drew joined forces to save the planet. Meet twins Abby and Derick Cragbridge, seventh-grade grandchildren of famed inventor Oscar Cragbridge, whose super-exclusive boarding school is no... Read More

Book Review

The Missing Myth

by Michelle Anne Schingler

“Homosexuality is an honor and a gift,” writes biologist Gilles Herrada, PhD, in a book which seeks to afford gay communities both historical closure and self-understanding. Both are critical to helping homosexuals metamorphose... Read More

Book Review

Cold Deck

by Joe Taylor

For a guy who deals out luck in the high-stakes blackjack pits of Las Vegas casinos, most of Jude Helms’s personal fortune is bad. Lately he has lost two jobs, the first after seventeen years at the Monaco, and the next after only four... Read More

Book Review

Forced Journey

by Julia Ann Charpentier

Stories of people who suffered during World War II fill shelves of libraries and bookstores, yet readers never seem to lose interest in the most-innocent victims of global warfare—the children. Rosemary Zibart presents a touching... Read More

Book Review

All the Buildings* in New York

by Julie Eakin

Artist and illustrator James Gulliver Hancock’s affection for New York City is evident in every line he’s put to paper in composing All the Buildings* in New York *That I’ve Drawn So Far. The transplant from Sydney, Australia,... Read More

Book Review

This Close

by Amy O'Loughlin

Jessica Francis Kane’s second collection of short stories confronts identity, self-perception, and the struggle that besets the soul when we find ourselves lost in our own lives. Kane’s characters are not on any grand journey toward... Read More

Load More