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If I Survive You by Jonathan Escoffery
“I’d be able to move out of my car and rent my own apartment; I could live like a fully formed twenty-first-century North American human. I needed this.” Being a big fan of collections of short stories following the same character/s, I was keen to read If I Survive You. Each chapter in this debut…
1970s, 1980s, 1990s, 2000s, 20th century, 3 STARS, Adult, adulthood, America, AMERICAN AUTHOR, belonging, Black & Black heritage authors, black diaspora, brothers, Caribbean, CHILDHOOD, collection of short stories, Contemporary, contemporary malaise, different styles (1st/2nd/3rd povs), drama, family, fathers & sons, FLORIDA, gritty realism, growing up, HIGH SCHOOL, homelessness, HUMOR, interconnected stories, intergenerational, jamaica, Jonathan Escoffery, LITERARY FICTION, male authors, masculinity, Miami, migration/immigration, music band, natural disasters, PRIVILEGE, published in 2022, RACE, read in 2022, satire, short stories, snapshots, SOCIAL COMMENTARY, work culture -
Travellers by Helon Habila
“Are you traveling in Europe?” he asked. I caught the odd phrasing. Of course I was traveling in Europe, but I understood he meant something else; he wanted to know the nature of my relationship to Europe, if I was passing through or if I had a more permanent and legal claim to Europe. A…
4 STARS, Adult, beautiful prose, Berlin, Black & Black heritage authors, bulgaria, Contemporary, different styles (1st/2nd/3rd povs), england, family, Germany, GRIEF, Helon Habila, homelessness, interconnected stories, Italy, lgbtq+ side, LITERARY FICTION, literary references, male authors, MARRIAGE, migration/immigration, Nigeria, Nigerian author, philosophical, Poverty, published in 2019, read in 2020, refugees, social issues, tragedy, trans side characters, trauma, Travellers, unnamed narrator, zambia -
Ragged Company by Richard Wagamese
“We become eternal by being held in memory’s loving arms.” After I read Richard Wagamese’s Medicine Walk, I was looking forward to reading more of his work. And Ragged Company did not disappoint. Similarly to Medicine Walk, which felt like a long conversation between a dying man and his son, Ragged Company presents its readers…
1980s, 1st pov, 4 STARS, addiction, Adult, canada, canadian author, cinema, dialogue heavy, films, found family, friendships, GRIEF, HISTORICAL FICTION, homelessness, indigenous, indigenous author, male authors, native american & first nation, Native American & First Nation authors, Ojibwe/Chippewa, Ojibwe/Chippewa author, Poverty, PUBLISHED IN 2008, Ragged Company, read in 2020, Richard Wagamese, trauma -
Lock Every Door : Book Review
Lock Every Door by Riley Sager ★★★✰✰ 3 stars This is the book equivalent of popcorn. If you are looking for a gripping plot-driven story, look no further. I think that the best thing about Lock Every Door is that it is an entertaining read. The action takes place over the course of a few days which…