I really enjoyed the first book so I quickly read through this one. However; I found myself skipping through sentences because the writer was very meticulous in her descriptions of everything. It was a little boring but I was on my toes with the conflicts the character had to face; it was painful...
Dreaming in English is a very interesting tale and perspective on immigration and I love it. This book did not fail to provide me with dangers and suspense.I love reading about immigration and it's many twists and turns. The love story in this book was not too soppy (a good thing) and the ending ...
This was a very sweet book. I really liked the main character's relationship to her son. The problem I had with it was that there is no real overriding problem to be solved. In the last third of the book, it seemed more that the author was making a checklist of ways to extend the narrative tha...
Meg Clark has a Hokey Pokey philosophy of life, you put your whole self in! Meg is a single mom with a nine year old son, Henry who she devotes herself to whole heartedly. She and Henry have a chance meeting with Ahmed, an Iranian-American at a coffee shop over a game of chess, and Meg feels an...
This is not the book to read if you want to learn about Iranian women or Islam. I was not surprised to find that the author's only connection to Iran is that her husband lived there until the age of ten. She is certainly allowed her own opinion of Iran, but is clearly misinformed on many counts. ...