The Virtual Bookcase : Shelf Fiction
The big reading books.
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Review:"Somewhere," muses Noah Calhoun, while sitting on his porch in the moonight, "there were people making love." Anyway, head
elsewhere for Great Literature, but if you're in the market to get your heartstrings plucked, look no further. The Notebook, a
Southern-fried story of love-lost-and-found-again, revolves around a single time-honored romantic dilemma: will beautiful Allison
Nelson stay with Mr. Respectability (to whom she happens to be engaged), or will she hook up with Noah, the romantic rascal she
left so many years ago? We're not telling, but you have two guesses and the first one doesn't count. Decades later, after Allison
develops Alzheimer's, ...
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Review:A funny thing happens to Novalee Nation on her way to Bakersfield, California. Her
ne'er-do-well boyfriend, Willie Jack Pickens, abandons her in an Oklahoma Wal-Mart and takes off on his own, leaving her with just
10 dollars and the clothes on her back. Not that hard luck is anything new to Novalee, who is "seventeen, seven months pregnant,
thirty-seven pounds overweight--and superstitious about sevens.... For most people, sevens were lucky. But not for her," Billie Letts
writes. "She'd had a bad history with them, starting with her seventh birthday, the day Momma Nell ran away with a baseball umpire
named Fred..."
Still, finding he...
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Review:What makes Pearl Cleage's novel so damned enjoyable? At first glance, after all,
What Looks Like Crazy on an Ordinary Day seems pretty heavy going: HIV, suicide, sudden infant death syndrome, and drunk driving
all figure prominently in the lives of narrator Ava Johnson and her older sister Joyce. It isn't long before crack addiction, domestic
violence, and unwed motherhood have joined the list--so, where's the pleasure? The answer lies in the sharp and funny attitude
Cleage brings to her depiction of one African American community in the troubled '90s. Ava Johnson, for example, might be
HIV-positive, but she's refreshingly forthright about it: "Most of...
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Review:"The first time my husband hit me I was nineteen years old," begins Fran Benedetto, the
broken heroine of Anna Quindlen's Black and Blue. With one sweeping sentence, the door to an abused and tortured world is swung
wide open and the psyche of a crushed and tattered self-image exposed. "Frannie, Frannie, Fran"--as Bobby Benedetto liked to call
her before smashing her into kitchen appliances--was a young, energetic nursing student when she met her husband-to-be at a
local Brooklyn bar. She was instantly captivated by his dark, brooding looks and magnetic personality, but her fascination soon
solidified into a marital prison sentence of incessant abuse a...
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