I would've given this book a four... I really enjoyed it all the way through until the end, which just left everything unresolved and hanging! :( If only the end had had more closure! But, I guess that makes it more like real life. I'm just not a real life kinda girl when it comes to my fiction, ...
I keep reading reviews of this book that say the narration is presented as "we"...I didn't notice it at all! Must be because I just finished reading "The Wives of Los Alamos" which is written with a much more startling use of "we"."We" serves to accent the rather closed Jewish community in the b...
Seems like this is a popular book with the LDS reader. It should be! There are so many parallels between the Observant Jew community in the book and an active LDS community. Really, you get any group of like-minded people, whether it's through religion or race or whatever, and you're going to get...
I'm not sure why my expectations were so high for this book. I did not like Ladies Auxiliary, but I loved the premise of Visible City so I figured I'd give it a try. In short, I thought it needed serious editing. Some sections were great, but many others seemed stuck in a rut or completely unbeli...
In Visible City, people hidden away inside their own little worlds slowly emerge and find connection. On New York’s Upper West Side, thousands of people go about their lives, passing each other on streets and in cafes, yet never really seeing or being seen.Nina is a stay at home mother with two y...