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Book Review

Repercussions

by Monica Carter

Immigrants participate in antiapartheid efforts, in this compassionate novel about family, bravery, and loss. Anthony Schneider’s "Repercussions" is a much-needed addition to the canon of South African antiapartheid literature. The... Read More

Book Review

Lincoln's Billy

by Thomas BeVier

Most of the authors who wrote any of the 15,000+ Lincoln books in existence would know immediately the full and proper name of the Billy in the title of this historical novel. He was William Herndon, who was the sixteenth president’s... Read More

Book Review

Radiomen

by Jason Henninger

This philosophical novel reflects on physics and cults, analyzing the nature of mysteries. Is there life beyond our world? What if a hazy childhood dream was in fact a memory of an impossible visitor? In "Radiomen", poet and novelist... Read More

Book Review

A Moveable Famine

by Karen Rigby

Skoyles presents a sharp snapshot of an era while employing thoughtful themes of self-doubt and the search for mentorship. Poet John Skoyles’s autobiographical novel, "A Moveable Famine", reveals his coming of age as a writer, from his... Read More

Book Review

The Tenth Witness

by Leia Menlove

Made vivid by Rosen’s careful crafting, inquisitive Henri and the variety of countries in which he investigates dig up intriguing realities from the past. Leonard Rosen’s "The Tenth Witness" reintroduces handsome Henri Poincare, who... Read More

Book Review

The Inbetween People

by Leia Menlove

"The Inbetween People" takes place in war-torn, Intifada-era Israel. Against this backdrop two young men, a Jewish pioneer and an Israeli Arab, become friends only to discover that the country’s past holds them in its thrall more than... Read More

Book Review

The Conduct of Saints

by Carrie Wallace

Christopher Davis continues to dazzle readers with the depth of his imagination and has created true literature that deserves to be remembered. Brandon Doherty, a Philadelphia-born prelate, alcoholic, and friend of the debauched Italian... Read More

Book Review

All Cry Chaos

by Edward Morris

At the age of fifty-seven, Interpol detective Henri Poincare still has the capacity to be shocked and saddened by human brutality. And in this first of a projected series of mysteries Poincare has plenty to be shocked about. He is still... Read More

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