You may recall I told you about my friends’ venture, Quarterlette, a couple months ago. Well, the site is doing great! If you haven’t checked it out yet, dear readers, today should be the day because it is my first day as a contributor. The girls asked me to review a book, so instead of…
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Book Review: Gone Girl
Gillian Flynn’s Gone Girl is good from the get-go but around a quarter of the way in, it really starts picking up. Right when you hit the halfway point, it hits “can’t put it down” status. That’s exactly what happened to me so I stayed up til 2 AM on a Friday night to finish the…
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Book Review: Most Talkative
I have loved Andy Cohen since I first saw him hosting a reunion show on Bravo. So many people, men included, soak up salacious pop culture gossip but are afraid to admit it because it’s considered lowbrow. Andy full-on owns his love for all things celebrity, particularly 80s icons. But what I liked most about…
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Book Review: Defending Jacob
Whether innocent or guilty, 14-year-old Jacob is a powerfully disturbed boy, something his parents grapple with understanding as they undergo his trial for murder of a classmate. As details of the murder emerge, Jacob’s parents (and the reader) wrestle with the distressing possible reality that their child may have done something heinous. Jacob’s father Andy…
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Book Review: The Innocents
I’ve never read The Age of Innocence, so I can’t really make any comparisons of Francesca Segal’s updated version, The Innocents, to the original. However, I can tell you that I enjoyed the modern take on the classic. This version moves the setting from New York to Northwest London and instead of focusing on the…
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Book Review: Don’t Get Too Comfortable
The fact that this book was written by a gay, Jewish guy with tons of crazy life experiences should have meant it would be a THK favorite. Unfortunately, while each essay should have written itself (cabana boy at a hot South Beach hotel, gay republicans, and Hooters Air), they all seemed to fall flat. Rakoff…
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Book Review: Tar Baby
Toni Morrison is one of the most lauded writers of our time and I can understand why after experiencing her unique structure in this novel, Tar Baby. The [3rd person] narration’s focus flows from character to character without pause, mirroring the Caribbean waters that play their own role in the novel. Writing prowess aside, I…
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Book Review: Blood, Bones & Butter
Now that I have (I hope) reached full foodie status, it’s hard for me to resist a foodie book. How can I turn away something that combines two of my favorite things, food and reading? I was particularly drawn to Gabrielle Hamilton’s memoir, Blood, Bones & Butter: The Inadvertent Education of a Reluctant Chef because I…
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Book Review: Me Talk Pretty One Day
For years I’ve been told I need to read David Sedaris’ collection of essays, Me Talk Pretty One Day. I tried once, but after buying a faulty copy (after about 50 pages it started from the beginning), I got discouraged by the botched book and put it down. At the time, I also wasn’t thrilled…
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Book Review: Those Who Save Us
Though a German, Anna is good of heart and can not understand why the Jews of her town are being persecuted. She does, however, understand the need to protect her daughter, Trudy, by whatever means necessary, even if it means becoming a Nazi officer’s mistress. In present day Minnesota, Trudy struggles with the guilt that…
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