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Name : | Nola T. |
My Reviews
A light fun easy read with a predictable plot line.
Cormac McCarthy crafts a page-turning novel that you'll be thinking about months after you've completed reading it. This prize winning novel should provide a springboard for an insightful discussion.
Beautifully written, Kathryn Stockett masterfully captures the language and dialect of the era.
Riveting plot, superb descriptions, and a zany sense of humor work to create this intricate mystery.
If your bookclub is of one mind theologically, perhaps this is a good read. Any discussion would entail a discussion of the belief of a Godhead and other Biblical promoted myths.
To broaden your knowledge of Frank Lloyd Wright, choose this well written novel drawn from scholarly research. Although your book club will be challenged by some of the ideas and behavior in the book, it will probably lead you to read more about this iconic figure in American architecture.
My book club disliked this rambling account of the dissolving marriage of the narrator. We wanted her to get her act together and move on. We felt reading her "blog style diary" was a waste of our reading time and that only her inside connections to get her book previewed on prime time television shows was what made it sell.
Listen to the audio book for a real treat. The readers are superb, adding to the book's fun. Plus, the French terms and phrases drip poetically from their tongues.
This book is now required reading for all military personel going into special forces. That is a lofty recommendation.
I'd vote for this title---absolutely mesmerizing, informative, beautifully written.
McCullough dwells on the very early and personal life of Theodore Roosevelt and the events that molded him to become the President.
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