Posts filed under 'Staff Reviews'
Odd Hours by Dean Koontz
The fourth in the series (Odd Thomas Novels) and still a great character. Reads fast and keeps you wanting more…like a fifth book.
-Barb
Add comment July 21, 2008
A Long Way Gone by Kshmael Beah and Left to Tell by Immaculee Ilibagiza
In A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier (2007), Ishmael Beah tells his story of growing up in Sierra Leone during the civil war there, in the 1990’s, and his rescue by Unicef. (966.404 Beah)
Similarly, in Left to Tell (2006), Immaculee Ilibagiza tells her story of survival during the Rwandan holocaust in 1994 and the spiritual journey that fed her soul during the three months she spent hiding. (B Illibagiza)
-Deb
Add comment July 8, 2008
A Fine Balance, by Rohinton Mistry
This is one of my all-time favorites. The setting (mid-1970’s India), the characters (four individuals of different castes and economic levels), the plot (the title refers to the precarious balance of survival), are all complex and absorbing, somewhat like a modern-day Dickens novel. (Fiction Mistry – we keep ours on the Oprah books shelf.)
-Deb
Add comment July 8, 2008
Skeletons at the Feast, by Chris Bohjalian
Takes place in 1944-5 Poland and Germany. The plot involves the trek of a farm family and their Scottish prisoner of war (who was assigned to help them till their fields) trek from Poland westward, to avoid the arrival of the Russian army. Stories of Uri, an escaped Jew, and Cecile, a young Jewish woman prisoner struggling to survive, alternate with the family’s story. Bohjalian was inspired to write this novel after reading the diary of a family friend who lived in Poland and endured similar travails. (Fiction Bohjalian)
-Deb
Add comment July 8, 2008
The Boy Who was Raised as a Dog by Bruce Duncan Perry
The Boy who was raised as a dog, and other stories from a psychiatrist’s
notebook: what traumatized children can teach us about loss, love and healing, by Bruce Duncan Perry, c2006, tells fascinating true stories of children who experienced early trauma, and how child psychiatrist Perry used his understandings of brain development to help the children to heal.
(618.9289 Perry)
Add comment July 8, 2008
The Red Letter Diary by Lily Koppel
“The Red Letter Diary: Reclaiming a Life Through the Pages of a Lost Journal”
Imagine finding a 70-year-old diary, discovering a kindred spirit in the diary’s pages, and locating the writer of the diary (a woman in her nineties). Imagine being that woman seventy years later and receiving a phone call from a girl in her twenties (the young woman who found the diary), and reconnecting with those dreams, aspirations, and relationships of adolescence. This book provides a glimpse of Manhattan in the early 1930’s, through selected brief diary entries of artistic, literary Florence Wolfson. (B Howitt)
-Deb
Add comment July 8, 2008
A Rare Breed of Love by Jana Kohl
“A Rare Breed of Love: The True Story of Baby and the Mission She Inspired to Help Dogs Everywhere”
The story of Baby, the three-legged poodle, who was rescued from the horrors of a puppymill before she was to be killed for being too old to produce any more puppies. The author adopted Baby and describes how Baby changed her life–transforming her into an animal rights advocate. The book follows their journey, and includes photographs of Baby with many of the famous people whose lives she has touched.
As someone who has adopted a rescued puppymill survivor, I found this to be a heartbreaking, inspiring book and a powerful call to action.
-Melanie
Add comment July 2, 2008





