Laila Lalami’s Dream Hotel: A Cautionary Tale

Sara Hussein is a woman whose life requires juggling multiple balls. She is an archivist, a mother of toddler twins, and is for the most part happily married. She had been having trouble sleeping. A working mother with twin babies. Who wouldn't welcome a harmless device to help deepen the little sleep she was getting. It was a no brainer and decided to have a device implanted that promised to improve and deepen her sleep. Dreamscape, a tech company, marketed this as a sleep aid but is, in fact, sharing its data. No one was more surprised than Sara.

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Latest Novel: A Dream Count Unpacked

In this latest novel by Nigerian writer, Chimamanda Ngozi Adiche, she explores the idea of dream count, a backwards look at the past in the hope of arriving at a better future. If the past is filled with so much unrealized potential, how can the failed affairs of old be transformed?

Cape Cod’s Literary Gems: ‘The House on Oyster Street’ Review

Anyone who knows me knows how much I love Cape Cod. I’ve been going there for summer vacations since I was a child. For years, my husband and I have made the trek to Provincetown, the excuse being the Tennessee Williams Festival. True we love the festival but it is only a solid reason not … Continue reading Cape Cod’s Literary Gems: ‘The House on Oyster Street’ Review

Predicting Death: A Review of Moriarty’s Latest Novel

n Liane Moriarty’s tenth novel, she once again throws her characters into spontaneous crisis. The book opens with a scene we are all familiar with. A flight delay. The cause doesn’t really matter. It sets the reader up to relate to what starts out as a very common day we’ve all experienced and then abruptly becomes a life changer.

Cork O’Connor’s Latest Mystery: Ojibwe Culture Explored

This is the 20th book in the series featuring Cork O’Connor. Set in northern Minnesota, these mysteries highlight issues facing the interplay of the white population and the Ojibwe. Cork O'Connor, half Irish and half Ojibwe, always finds himself negotiating the two worlds. I have read about ten of these books and although I missed many … Continue reading Cork O’Connor’s Latest Mystery: Ojibwe Culture Explored

There Are Rivers in the Sky: A Single Drop of Water Connects Then and Now

It’s hard to know where to begin talking about this book. Its breath is massive. It is the story of three characters, two rivers, the Tigris and Thames, and an ancient poem. And beneath it all, it connects us all through a single drop of water. Where else can you find a story that begins … Continue reading There Are Rivers in the Sky: A Single Drop of Water Connects Then and Now

Unveiling Fate, An Evocative Debut Novel

As the novel begins, a mysterious box is delivered to everyone in the world over age 22. From a bustling city in Europe to suburban enclaves in America to African villages, everyone gets one. Inside the box is a string. Its length determines how long you will live. I was immediately hooked.What would I do? Would I open the book? Would I be able to resist knowing? Would I not want to know? And if I held a short string in my hand, how would I cope? Would I completely change or remain fully entrenched in the life I was living? The same thoughts rippled through the characters in this book.

Our Haunted Past Comes Full Circle

The main protagonist, Jane Flanagan, had a troubled childhood dominated by a single alcoholic mother, and a sister she doesn’t connect to. But she has seemingly risen above it to become an archivist at the Schlesinger Library at Harvard. Residual behaviors, unacknowledged yet ever present, rear their ugly heads at a time when all should have been well. She engages in behavior that may cost her both her ascending career and marriage.

Don’t Judge a Book By Its Cover

If ever there was a timely novel, this is the one. Since banning books has become a strategic weapon in our national culture wars, here comes an entertaining satire set in a quintessential southern town. Framed as a battle over books and a free-standing little library, it is about the influence books have in its residents’ lives and the town’s cultural norms.

The Magic of Paris

If this is your introduction into the world of Ruth Reichl, you are in for a sumptuous treat. Her books, whether memoir or fiction, bring the senses alive. This book is a modern-day fairy tale. The reader is transported to a world of taste, smell, and an insider’s look of a Paris we all wish we could magically inhabit.