February 23, 2004 at 11:11am | Filed under: Children and YA Fiction
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You’ve got to like a kid who continues in therapy just so her mental-health professional won’t be traumatized. And 15-year-old…Read More »
Isolated from civilization for five months at the sardonically named Envy River Tower, with little more than a small cabin,…Read More »
February 22, 2004 at 03:33pm | Filed under: Children and YA Non-fiction, Fiction: Novels
Charles Foran has the mixed fortune to be an author whose writing is admired by critics and awards committees, but…Read More »
February 20, 2004 at 01:02pm | Filed under: Fiction: Novels
In Supreme at Last, self-proclaimed “court-watcher” Peter McCormick scales a mountain of information to provide readers with a history of…Read More »
February 17, 2004 at 01:12pm | Filed under: Politics & Current Affairs
Best-selling teen novelist Don Trembath approaches a younger audience with this introductory title in the Black Belt series. School principal…Read More »
February 12, 2004 at 05:00pm | Filed under:
Almost every page in Bafflegab, Stan Rogal’s second novel, contains an allusion or citation. Orphan Annie’s “leaping lizards!” aside, most…Read More »
February 12, 2004 at 04:42pm | Filed under: Fiction: Novels
Writers of fiction often cringe when readers attempt to draw connections between the life of the writer and their art.…Read More »
February 12, 2004 at 04:34pm | Filed under: Fiction: Novels
In her introduction to Going Some Place, editor Lynne Van Luven acknowledges that creative non-fiction is a “hybrid genre,” difficult…Read More »
February 12, 2004 at 04:24pm | Filed under: Anthologies, Children and YA Non-fiction
To read Margaret Somerville is to be exposed to terms, ideas, and questions that, at the dawn of the new…Read More »
February 12, 2004 at 04:17pm | Filed under: Sports, Health & Self-help
Lean Mean Machines is the story of Jeremy and Laure, two high school students who, in a twist on the…Read More »
February 12, 2004 at 02:01pm | Filed under: