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Reviews by Cathryn Conroy

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Erotic Stories for Punjabi Widows
by Balli Kaur Jaswal
The Clever Title Should Win an Award…But the Book—Not So Much (4/19/2023)
I admit it! I admit it! I bought and read this book by Balli Kaur Jaswal because of the title. While the book itself is only OK, the clever title should win an award.

Here's the short version: This book is so bad…it's (almost) good. Soap opera, anyone?

Nikki is 22, a recentmore
Normal People
by Sally Rooney
Stunning, Intelligent, and Accomplished. This Book Grabbed My Heart and Soul (4/19/2023)
What does it really mean to be in a relationship? What does it mean to be in young and in love? With sparse but beautiful language, author Sally Rooney has written a (literary) love story for the ages.

Marianne and Connell grew up in the same small Irish town. She is wealthy,more
The Dark Monk: A Hangman's Daughter Tale, Book 2
by Oliver Potzsch
A Really Good Tale Well Told (4/19/2023)
Part historical novel, part adventure story and part murder mystery, this intriguing book, the second in "The Hangman's Daughter" series by Oliver Pötzsch, is quite the page-turner. Underneath an intricate plot, this is also a none-too-subtle statement about Christianity—more
Unsheltered: A Novel
by Barbara Kingsolver
When the World as You Know It Inexorably Changes, What Would You Do? (4/19/2023)
What happens when the world view you have always known inexorably shifts? Do you embrace the change as forward-thinking or fight it for all you're worth? If you simply deny that the change is real, will those words be enough to bring back the good old days? That is themore
My Life as a Rat
by Joyce Carol Oates
A Deeply Affecting Book About Forgiveness (4/19/2023)
This is a deeply affecting and heart-wrenching book about forgiveness. And it's about the most difficult form of forgiveness: Forgiving oneself.

Violet Rue is the youngest of seven children in the Irish Catholic, blue collar Kerrigan family of South Niagara, New York. Whilemore
The Overachievers: The Secret Lives of Driven Kids
by Alexandra Robbins
This Book Is Deeply Disturbing…and That Is Exactly Why You Should Read It (4/19/2023)
This book is deeply disturbing. And that is exactly why you should read it.

Written by Alexandra Robbins, the book follows four juniors, three seniors and one graduate of Walt Whitman High School in tony Bethesda, Maryland for a little more than a year during 2004-2005. Asmore
The Orchid House: A Novel
by Lucinda Riley
What a Huge Disappointment! Weak and Boring…Nothing More Than a Mediocre Soap Opera (4/19/2023)
Oh, what a huge disappointment! The publisher's plot summary is spectacular, and based on that this could have been a wonderful, compelling ChickLit book. But it wasn't. Why? The writing is stilted, the dialogue is strained and unrealistic, and the characters' actions aremore
Courting Mr. Lincoln
by Louis Bayard
Not a (4/19/2023)
What this book is: A fascinating, extraordinarily well-written historical novel on a young Abraham Lincoln, whose future wife, Mary Todd, was making eyes at him across the well-to-do parlors of Springfield, Illinois in the early 1840s, while at the same time the futuremore
The Art of the Wasted Day
by Patricia Hampl
Thought-Provoking and Scholarly, But NOT an Instruction Manual for How to Be a Lazy Bum (4/19/2023)
I admit it! I bought this book for the title. For me, wasting a single hour, much less an entire day, is an anathema, so I was fascinated about an entire book on the topic.

As it turns out, the book is not exactly an instruction manual for being a lazy bum.

Instead, it's amore
The Great Believers
by Rebecca Makkai
This Is the Rarest of Books: A Heartbreaking and Devastating Story, But I Couldn't Stop Reading (4/19/2023)
This is the rarest of books. It is a story of loss and separation—the kind that is foisted upon us by death and the kind that is inflicted upon us by estrangement—but it is also a story about the abiding power of love and friendship. It is a riveting, can't-put-it-downmore
The Other Americans
by Laila Lalami
There Is Always Another Side of the Story (4/19/2023)
There is always another side of the story.

Author Laila Lalami has taken this adage to heart in this searing and ingenious tale about the death of Driss Guerraoui, a Moroccan immigrant living in the small town of Mojave, California with this wife, Maryam. The couple have twomore
Hazards of Time Travel
by Joyce Carol Oates
A Dystopian Novel and Also a Coming-of-Age Love Story…But Not One of Joyce Carol Oates's Best Books (4/19/2023)
Many us have wondered in recent years if our democracy is under a very real threat. If you are one of these people, this dystopian novel by Joyce Carol Oates may give you nightmares because what should be a horrific fantasy limited to the pages of a book may feel more likemore
Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of the Lusitania
by Erik Larson
This Is the Best Kind of Nonfiction Book: A Fact-Filled Page-Turner (4/19/2023)
Crescendo. That is the best word to describe this book.

From page one, the story slowly builds to a crescendo that is searing, heartbreaking, tragic, and absolutely frustrating—because at so many points along the way, the sinking of the famed passenger ship Lusitania by amore
The Incendiaries: A Novel
by R O. Kwon
Powerfully Intense, Somewhat Perplexing and Quite Disturbing. It's Real Work to Read This Short Book (4/19/2023)
The best way to describe this succinct, haunting book by R.O. Kwon is powerfully intense, somewhat perplexing, and quite disturbing.

You may think that because it is a little more than 200 pages long, this will be shorty, breezy read. Think again. Every word counts. Andmore
A Hundred Summers
by Beatriz Williams
This Is the Perfect Summer Read…a ChickLit Delight! (4/19/2023)
This is the perfect beach book—even if you can't make it to the sand and waves this year. It's sassy and fun with colorful characters, lots of romance, and a plot that is so gripping you won't want to stop reading. It is nearly perfect ChickLit!

Taking place in 1931-32 andmore
Trust Exercise: A Novel
by Susan Choi
Raw, Shocking, and Bold: And I'm Not Sure I Really Understand It (4/19/2023)
I will succinctly describe this book in one word: raw. And while it is also powerful, daring, shocking, confusing, and bold, above all else it is raw.

Written by Susan Choi, this is the story of a group of talented high school students in an unnamed Southern town who aremore
You Think It, I'll Say It: Stories
by Curtis Sittenfeld
This Collection of Short Stories Is Simply Wonderful! (4/19/2023)
Zing! Each of these 10 original short stories by Curtis Sittenfeld has something special in it, something that gives it a zing, a pop, a punch. Sometimes it's a truly unexpected plot twist, sometimes it's just a brilliant observation, and sometimes it's something so totallymore
Dawson's Fall
by Roxana Robinson
The First Half Is a Slog…but Keep Reading! The Reward of the Second Half Is So Very Much Worth It (4/19/2023)
Question: When you're reading a book you don't particularly like, do you stop—as in, too many books, too little time—or do keep going so that if it gets better, you won't miss out on something amazing? I fall into the latter category. (I always keep going…no matter what.)more
The Island of Sea Women
by Lisa See
This Is a Novel Masquerading as Nonfiction: A Gripping Story That Is Rich in Historical Detail (4/18/2023)
Some books we read for entertainment. Some books we read for information. And some books, such as this one by Lisa See, provide both. Actually, there is so much factual information in this book that it is almost a novel masquerading as nonfiction.

Spanning 70 years from 1938more
The Lake House
by Kate Morton
A Can't-Put-It-Down Novel That Is Totally Captivating (4/18/2023)
The best way to describe this can't-put-it-down novel by Kate Morton is: multilayered. No, wait. Multi-multi-multi-layered. There is SO much going on here! And every bit of it is a literary delight.

At its very core—deep, deep down—this is a mystery. But because it's so muchmore

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