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Mollie W

Mollie W

BookBrowse Reviewer
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BookBrowse Reviewer Mollie is a BookBrowse Reviewer and has written reviews featured in The BookBrowse Review.

Mollie Smith Waters is a teacher of humanities at a rural community college in Alabama. She has written book reviews for Bookkaholic, The Montgomery Advertiser, Southern Literary Review, Alabama Writers' Forum, and Camellia Magazine. Mollie enjoys a good mystery, crime, or thriller, but she is also a fan of historical fiction, Southern literature, and American classics. When she is not reading or teaching, she is involved in her community's theater group, which she helped create, or traveling the world.

BookBrowse Editorial Reviews (7)

BookBrowse Editorial Review
Sun, Sand, Murder: A Mystery
by John Keyse-Walker
(10/5/2016)
As someone who grew up reading Agatha Christie novels, I have always loved a good mystery. Sun, Sand, Murder is such a book. It nicely blends crime, history, setting, humor, and a good plot. The book is enjoyable on many levels, and I am hopeful that it is just the first in a possible series.
BookBrowse Editorial Review
Blood at the Root: A Racial Cleansing in America
by Patrick Phillips
(9/21/2016)
An engaging portrait of the South’s haunting legacy, the lessons of Blood at the Root: A Racial Cleansing in America will stick with readers long after they have completed the book. Regrettably, they are lessons Americans still need to learn, for many black Americans today continue to experience racial injustice. Incidents like Trayvon Martin’s murder and the unrest in Ferguson, Missouri are modern reminders of how much work Americans need to do to eradicate racial intolerance. The plight
BookBrowse Editorial Review
Boy Erased: A Memoir
by Garrard Conley
(8/3/2016)
Boy Erased is a poignant non-fiction work. Conley’s struggle to be a good son and devoted Christian while coping with his homosexuality is powerfully explored, as is his parents’ inability to cope with their son’s sexual orientation.
BookBrowse Editorial Review
Quiet Neighbors
by Catriona McPherson
(6/1/2016)
Because the novel is classified as suspense, readers will need to be careful not to become discouraged with its pace. The climax builds very slowly, but the last few chapters bring several surprises and answers to tidbits that seemed irrelevant at first mention. The ending is swift, and although the book takes a while to gain momentum, readers should stick it out.

While Quiet Neighbors does have some quirks, it is an engaging read that most will find worth their time and effort
BookBrowse Editorial Review
Girl in the Blue Coat
by Monica Hesse
(5/4/2016)
Girl in the Blue Coat has many twists and turns, and just when readers get comfortable in the knowledge that they know what will happen next, Hesse pulls the rug out from under them. A surprise ending, along with several other awe-inducing reveals along the way, keep readers in suspense to the very end.
BookBrowse Editorial Review
Midnight in Broad Daylight: A Japanese American Family Caught Between Two Worlds
by Pamela Rotner Sakamoto
(2/3/2016)
Author Pamela Rotner Sakamoto brilliantly captures the hardships and anxieties of the Fukuhara family.
BookBrowse Editorial Review
The Hours Count
by Jillian Cantor
(11/18/2015)
Any time an author delves into historical fiction, he or she must make the work plausible, which Jillian Cantor does. The Hours Count invites readers into a world that astutely blends fact with fiction.

Reviews (3)

Manderley Forever
by Tatiana de Rosnay
Well researched and enjoyable (12/28/2016)
I asked to review "Manderley Forever" because I did not know much about Daphne du Maurier. I knew she was the author of "Rebecca," which I have not read, but have seen and enjoyed the film many times.
The book was good. I was pleasantly surprised by the ease and conversational style of the author's narrative. She obviously did a great deal of research for the work.
I would have liked a little more information about a few of the details she shared (like the bullying incident early on; why was du Maurier treated that way? Just because she was French? Was there anti-French sentiment in England at that time?), but it may have been hard to come by some of that information.
Overall, I was pleased with the book, and I would certainly recommend it to others.
Lillian Boxfish Takes a Walk
by Kathleen Rooney
Slow read (10/2/2016)
The book started slowly for me, and I never fully felt invested after. The title character had a lot of pluck, which is what saved the novel for me, but it's a slow read.
The Widow
by Fiona Barton
Barton's "The Widow" fast but problematic (12/29/2015)
Fiona Barton's "The Widow" is a debut novel. Taking into account Barton's newness in the psychological thriller genre, the book is engaging, but has a few troublesome areas.

The novel has a respectable plot that moves quickly. Barton also creates memorable and sympathetic characters. However, the author often abruptly shifts in time from 2006, when two-year-old Bella Elliot is kidnapped, to 2010, when Glen Taylor, the accused, dies. The book focuses more on how Taylor's widow, Jean, handles the aftermath of Glen's dishonesty. The jumps in time spoil some of the fun in finding out what happens to the characters.
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