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Jun 19 2013in Book Reviews, Features by Catherine ToskoTags: key peninsula, Review, ted olinger, the woodpecker menace
This charming slice of life from autobiographical writer Ted Olinger, set in Washington State’s Key Peninsula at the bottom of Puget Sound, is truly flavorful. Beautifully illustrated with scrawly ink blot style drawings from whimsily-named local artist Tweed Meyer, Ted Olinger has managed something rare and magical – to capture not only his own life [...]
Tags: key peninsula, Review, ted olinger, the woodpecker menace
Jun 16 2013in Book Reviews, Features by Avery HurtTags: ben burgess jr, monster
This first novel by poet and spoken-word artist Ben Burgess, Jr. chronicles the love life of Ken Ferguson, a young man who responds to being dumped by a self-centered, materialistic girlfriend by giving up on love and instead devoting himself to pursing as many meaningless sexual conquests as he can manage—and he manages quite a [...]
Tags: ben burgess jr, monster
Jun 15 2013in Book Reviews, Features by Catherine ToskoTags: alexa t liguori, four times blessed
Four Times Blessed is the story of Crusa, a young woman who lives closely with her large extended family, and is engaged to Andrew, a well-respected boy from her New England island, who falls for Lium, a bodyguard who is supposed to be watching her before her wedding. Her flawless life plan is about to [...]
Tags: alexa t liguori, four times blessed
Jun 15 2013in Book Reviews, Features by Avery HurtTags: jesse baker, Review, the nothing place
This ambitious first novel by Jesse Baker begins with 16-year-old Max arriving in Los Angeles from his hometown of Bend, Oregon to enter an in-patient drug rehabilitation facility. For the few days before he is due to report to rehab, Max stays with his Aunt Mercedes, her children, Erin and Mikey, and their nanny, Shannon. [...]
Tags: jesse baker, Review, the nothing place
Jun 12 2013in Book Reviews, Features by Jordan Baker
Brent Cossack is a former CIA member who has gone rogue. He takes his orders from a shadowy figure codenamed Sacco, and assassinates corrupt corporate figureheads. Then there’s Rick Clark, who’s working to bring the Cossack’s militant group EMMA to justice after a string of murders. As the novel jumps around in time, it pieces [...]
Jun 11 2013in Book Reviews, Features by Catherine ToskoTags: blair evans, the day the music died
Cameron Forsyth is a young man studying at music school in New Zealand looking for an impossible answer – what is random chance and what is talent? Is he being deluded in his love for music? What is the secret to music’s magic and what has been twisted out of shape by academics and the [...]
Tags: blair evans, the day the music died
Jun 11 2013in Book Reviews, Features by Avery Hurt
This small collection consists of six very short stories and a novella. The stories are linked by theme: death, madness, forgiveness, love. It’s primal stuff, and Donnelly handles his material gently, almost reverently. The first six stories are very short, very lean, almost ghost-like. And indeed the quiet dead figure largely in these stories, as [...]
Jun 3 2013in Book Reviews, Features by Avery Hurt
The Spark, by Norwegian novelist O. H. Robsson, is a love story. It’s a slow, relaxing, rambling tale of a man who rediscovers his one true love after thinking she was lost to him forever. The first three-quarters of the book are mostly devoid of tension; any complications that do arise are relatively minor and [...]
May 24 2013in Book Reviews, Features by Avery Hurt
Anne Pfeffer, the author of Girls Love Travis Walker, is working in a relatively new niche in publishing, the New Adult genre. New Adult novels are aimed at readers from ages 18 to early-20s or so, and tend to feature characters of the same age in situations common to college students and/or people who are [...]
May 21 2013in Book Reviews, Features by Avery Hurt
In this massive sci-fi adventure, Daniel Cruz takes readers to a thoroughly imagined world, far from Earth and three million years in the future, in an epoch known as Una’ria. Humans as we know them no longer exist. They have evolved into a new species known as Rytelios, a much more subtle creature with a [...]