It was a touching idea to want to write a book about understanding the suicide of one's sister, however there just wasn't enough information to fill a book. Because of that I often found the author repeating things over and over. And the fact that the author had to speculate about parts of her si...
Eleanor Cahn is a professor of literature, the wife of a preeminent cardiac surgeon, and a devoted mother. But on a trip to Paris to present a paper on Anna Karenina, Eleanor re-connects with Stephen—a childhood friend with whom she has had a complicated relationship—that forces her to realize th...
House Under Snow is a single narrative story that revisits Anna Crane's childhood which allude to a gradual disintegration of family, relationships and self-worth. Despite a lack of multiple perspectives, Anna's words are compelling and hold enough weight to give each character individuality and ...
Nate’s hair was unwashed. He hadn’t shaved. His wrinkled clothes looked slept-in. He passed the hours of the afternoon and night in his studio or out and about and was not the kind of man usually seen in broad daylight before noon. Something was up. He was manically chewing gum, one arm strung ov...