Book Review: Angels by Marian Keyes
By the time Marian Keyes wrote Angels, she’d already made the Walsh family a rom-com institution—funny on the surface, steel […]
Book Review: Angels by Marian Keyes Read More »
By the time Marian Keyes wrote Angels, she’d already made the Walsh family a rom-com institution—funny on the surface, steel […]
Book Review: Angels by Marian Keyes Read More »
Marian Keyes made “funny-sad” its own literary mood, and Rachel’s Holiday might be her crown jewel. Second in the Walsh
Book Review: Rachel’s Holiday by Marian Keyes Read More »
Marian Keyes didn’t so much arrive as kick the door in with Watermelon back in the mid-90s. It was her
Book Review: Watermelon by Marian Keyes Read More »
Anthony Doerr’s blockbuster historical novel won the Pulitzer Prize and became one of those rare books that both your book
Book Review: All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr Read More »
Natalie Haynes is a classicist-turned-novelist with a mischievous glint; she’s built a second life retelling Greek myth from angles the
Book Review: A Thousand Ships by Natalie Haynes Read More »
Marie Lu’s breakout YA dystopian novel, Legend (2011), kicked off a trilogy that felt like a jolt to the genre:
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Emily Henry carved herself a sweet spot in contemporary romance with Beach Read, so when People We Meet on Vacation
Book Review: People We Meet on Vacation by Emily Henry Read More »
Niall Williams’s Four Letters of Love has that old-world shimmer I adore—lush Irish prose spun around fate, art, and the
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Ann Napolitano has a knack for writing about families the way they actually feel—messy, loyal, unforgiving, and somehow still the
Book Review: Hello, Beautiful by Ann Napolitano Read More »
Gabriel García Márquez’s One Hundred Years of Solitude is one of those novels people call “a universe,” and for once
Book Review: One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez Read More »