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Displaced Persons

'Recommended for a wide range of readers, and a perfect book club choice.' - Library Journal, starred review
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New Author Interviews |
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Michael J. Sandel
Michael J. Sandels "Justice" course is one of the most popular and influential at Harvard. Interested readers can take a seat in the lecture hall alongside Harvard College students, thanks to a 2009 PBS lecture series....
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Carol Lynch Williams
Carol Lynch Williams discussed The Chosen One, and what inspired her to write a book about polygamy.
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C. W. Gortner
A video interview with C.W. Gortner in which he talks about his 2010 historical novel, The Confessions of Catherine de Medici.
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Vanessa Woods
Vanessa Woods discusses her first book, Bonobo Handshake, and her experiences with the extrarodinary Bonobos.
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Summary and Book Reviews |
The Lovely Bones: Summary and book reviews of The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold, plus links to an excerpt from The Lovely Bones and a biography of Alice Sebold. |
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Book Summary
A BookBrowse Favorite Book |
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When we first meet Susie Salmon, she is already in heaven. As she looks down from this strange new place, she tells us, in the fresh and spirited voice of a fourteen-year-old girl, a tale that is both haunting and full of hope.
In the weeks following her death, Susie watches life on Earth continuing without her--her school friends trading rumors about her disappearance, her family holding out hope that she'll be found, her killer trying to cover his tracks. As months pass without leads, Susie sees her parents' marriage being contorted by loss, her sister hardening herself in an effort to stay strong, and her little brother trying to grasp the meaning of the word gone.
And she explores the place called heaven. It looks a lot like her school playground, with the good kind of swing sets. There are counselors to help newcomers adjust and friends to room with. Everything she ever wanted appears as soon as she thinks of it--except the thing she most wants: to be back with the people she loved on Earth.
With compassion, longing, and a growing understanding, Susie sees her loved ones pass through grief and begin to mend. Her father embarks on a risky quest to ensnare her killer. Her sister undertakes a feat of remarkable daring. And the boy Susie cared for moves on, only to find himself at the center of a miraculous event.
The Lovely Bones is luminous and astonishing, a novel that builds out of grief the most hopeful of stories. In the hands of a brilliant new writer, this story of the worst thing a family can face is transformed into a suspenseful and even funny novel about love, memory, joy, heaven, and healing.
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| BOOK REVIEWS |
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Media Reviews
Publisher's Weekly
Starred Review. A small but far from minor miracle...a story that is both tragic and full of light and grace...full of suspense and written in lithe, resilient prose that by itself delights.
Booklist
Masterful and compelling.... Sebold's beautiful novel shows how a tragedy can tear a family apart, and bring them back together again. She challenges us to re-imagine happy endings, as she brings the novel to a conclusion that is unfalteringly magnificent. And she paints, with an artist's precision, a portrait of a world where the terrible and the miraculous can and do co-exist.
Kirkus Reviews
Mesmerizing and deserving of the attention it's sure to receive.
Time Out New York
First novelist Sebold takes some major artistic risks in her knockout literary murder mystery, THE LOVELY BONES. Her most rewarding gamble is appointing the fourteen-year-old murder victim as her narrator....Amazingly, the book never succumbs to sentimentality nor supernatural silliness. This sparkling debut delivers on two levels as a pins-and-needles crime noir and as an emotionally penetrating family drama.
Michiko Kakutani, New York Times
Ms. Sebold's achievements her ability to capture both the ordinary and the extraordinary, the banal and the horrific, in lyrical, unsentimental prose; her instinctive understanding of the mathematics of love between parents and children; her gift for making palpable the dreams, regrets and unstilled hopes of one girl and one family.
Jonathan Franzen, author of The Corrections
Sebold has given us a fantasy-fable of great authority, charm, and daring. She's a one-of-a-kind writer.
Lynn Freed, author of House of Women
Alice Sebold achieves something extraordinary in this novel she makes manifest, in a beautifully written and complex story full of love and hope, the utter banality of evil.
Karen Joy Fowler, author of Sister Noon
Alice Sebold's first novel is amazing. Careful and courageous, original and profound, The Lovely Bones spins the most painful subject imaginable into pure gold. The beginning is chilling, the ending gorgeous; there is no way to put it down in between. Reading it is a gift!
Elaine Petrocelli, bookseller, Book Passage
I can't begin to tell you how much I enjoyed The Lovely Bones. Alice Sebold brings Susie to life-even as she looks down from heaven. And she never loses the voice and point of view-not an easy feat in such an original story. I can't wait to start telling people that they must read The Lovely Bones. Thanks for letting me have an early look at this treasure.
Michael Chabon, author of The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay
The Lovely Bones is one of the strangest experiences I have had as a reader in a long time, and one of the most memorable. Painfully funny, bracingly tough, terribly sad, it is a feat of imagination and a tribute to the healing power of grief.
Margot Livesey, author of Eva Moves the Furniture
What a wonderful writer Alice Sebold is. Out of darkness she makes light, out of despair and violence, beauty, out of deep loss a peculiar, hard-won gain. All her characters, for good or ill, travel to surprising places, and so do we, her extremely fortunate readers.
Amy Bloom, author of A Blind Man Can See How Much I Love You
Set in a heaven as real and possible as the earth is mysterious and shifting, The Lovely Bones explores, with clear-eyed affection and wit, the romance of family life, the shy, funny turbulence of adolescence, and the painful tracks love and loss make through our world.
Aimee Bender, author of An Invisible Sign of My Own
The Lovely Bones is the kind of novel that, once you're done, you may go visit while wandering through a bookstore and touch on the binding, just to remember the emotions you felt while reading it. Intensely wise and gorgeously written, The Lovely Bones is a heartbreaking page-turner. I envy the reader who is about to jump into the world of Susie Salmon and her incredible family.
Heidi Julavits, author of The Mineral Palace
Sebold ingeniously, and with great humor and bluntness, distorts the typical coming-of-age story-her Susie Salmon, a winsome teenager, is already dead. Yet The Lovely Bones achieves a delightfulness, a buoyancy, a darkly addictive charm, precisely because Sebold never shirks her raw emotional duties toward this aggrieved family, this murdered girl.
Alice Elliott Dark, author of Think of England and In the Gloaming
In The Lovely Bones, Alice Sebold depicts both heaven and earth with such skill that the many surprises in this book feel believable and familiar. I read every word with pleasure and admiration. The Singhs and the Salmons will be in my thoughts for a long time.
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Recent Reader Reviews
Rated of 5
by Typeaux
Difficult to Categorize
I enjoyed this book and found it compelling reading by virtue of the author's finesse. The emotions here are quieter, more subdued, yet familiar and poignant. The book doesn't have the usual dramatic hook, nor does it build to a swelling crescendo ... Read More
Rated of 5
by Karen Trevino
Great Book
The “Lovely Bones”, written by Alice Sebold, is a book about how difficult it was for a family to cope with the loss of a child due to a violent crime. Susie Salmon was a 14- year-old girl who was raped and killed by her neighbor, a serial killer ... Read More
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| Editor's Choice |
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Brodeck
Phillipe Claudel |
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Set in an unnamed time and place, Brodeck blends the familiar and unfamiliar, myth and history into a work of extraordinary power and resonance. Readers of J. M. Coetzee's Disgrace, Bernhard Schlink's The Reader and Kafka will be captivated by Brodeck. |
The Confessions of Catherine de Medici
C. W. Gortner |
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From the fairy-tale châteaux of the Loire Valley to the battlefields of the wars of religion to the mob-filled streets of Paris, The Confessions of Catherine de Medici is the extraordinary untold journey of one of the most maligned and misunderstood women ever to be queen. |
Bonobo Handshake
Vanessa Woods |
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A young woman follows her fiancé to war-torn Congo to study extremely endangered bonobo apes - who teach her a new truth about love and belonging. |
Rock Paper Tiger
Lisa Brackmann |
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American Ellie Cooper, deserted by her husband, has made a number of friends in China. But suddenly one of them disappears, and security organizations are hounding her for information. Contacted through an online role-playing game by a group claiming to be friends of Lao Zhang asking her for... |
Beirut 39
Samuel Shimon |
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An exciting collection of the best new writing from the Arab world, by thirty-nine writers under thirty-nine. |
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Brooklyn Bridge by Karen Hesse |
| I'm a ten year old girl who recently read this book. It was a deep, yet fun confection about growing up in the early 1900's, the time where New York ...
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Zeitoun by Dave Eggers |
| This book is important, yet has been largely overlooked by reviewers and book clubs. It's not just a history of Hurricane Katrina, but a personal ...
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Three Cups of Tea by David O. Relin |
| This book is an amazing read. I opened it last week and I couldn't put it down. I cried a few times because I was overwhelmed by this man's ...
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| Latest BookBrowse News |
Publishers Weekly accepting paid reviews (Aug 26 2010) Publishers Weekly, one of the USA's oldest publishing industry magazines, today announced that they are accepting registrations from self-published authors...
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Larsson's ex-partner hits out at renaming of trilogy (Aug 23 2010) Stieg Larsson would not have approved of the renaming of the opening book to his Millennium trilogy from "Men Who Hate Women" to "The Girl with the Dragon...
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