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Danielle M

Danielle M

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

Danielle McClellan has been a bookseller, managing editor of two small presses, senior editor at the University of California, Irvine, and managing editor of the academic journal Law & Society Review. She continues to write and edit and divides her time between Granada, Spain, and the US Pacific Northwest. Danielle loves connecting readers with good books and will always be a bookseller at heart. She reads widely and reviews literary fiction, literature in translation, poetry and essays, and food writing.

BookBrowse Editorial Reviews (18)

BookBrowse Editorial Review
Perfection
by Vincenzo Latronico
(11/5/2025)
Latronico is interested in a specific generation of the digital age, the last group to "still remember paper maps and landlines" but introduced to technology early enough in their teens to have embraced it with great enthusiasm, those who are now working as creative professionals and embracing a fully digital lifestyle. His protagonists are Anna and Tom, European expats in Berlin who work online as graphic designers. Latronico skewers the contemporary millennial obsession with the cura
BookBrowse Editorial Review
Heart the Lover
by Lily King
(9/24/2025)
Heart the Lover opens in a college classroom on a New England campus in the late 1980s. Our unnamed narrator is in her senior year, and her life takes a sharp turn the day that one of her essays is admiringly read aloud to the class by her 17th-century-lit professor, capturing the attention of the "two smart guys" of the class, intellectual hotshots Sam and Yash, who soon invite the narrator into their cossetted world. The college-era chapters involve an intense flurry of dating, miscommu
BookBrowse Editorial Review
Fonseca: A Novel
by Jessica Francis Kane
(8/27/2025)
Kane's novel opens with mother and son arriving at the Delaney mansion in Fonseca, Mexico. They are met by the taciturn housekeeper, Chela, who seems surprised by Valpy's young age and even more surprised to see Penelope on the doorstep with him, as though Valpy might somehow have managed to travel to Mexico on his own. This first strange misunderstanding sets the scene for many others to come, and the novel is awash in various forms of cultural miscommunication, interpersonal misinterpretation,
BookBrowse Editorial Review
The Fortnight in September: A Novel
by R.C. Sherriff
(7/16/2025)
Sherriff's novel follows the Stevens family of Dorset—Ernest, an accounts clerk; his wife, Flossie; daughter Mary (age 19), a dressmaker's assistant; and sons Dick (17), a stationer's clerk, and young Ernie (10)—on their annual two-week family trip to the southern seaside resort town of Bognor Regis, to which they have returned every summer since Mr. and Mrs. Stevens first visited on their honeymoon twenty years earlier. As the focus moves from one character to another, t
BookBrowse Editorial Review
Twist: A Novel
by Colum McCann
(5/7/2025)
With his always elegant prose, Colum McCann is one of those rare writers who successfully arcs back and forth between the wide-angle perspective of global and societal concerns and its opposite, the sharply focused close-up on individuals and their specific and complicated human lives. His novels expand and contract in an almost breath-like manner. Like his free-diving characters, McCann is willing to risk plunging into the depths in the hope of better articulating what exists in the dimmer reac
BookBrowse Editorial Review
Audition: A Novel
by Katie Kitamura
(4/9/2025)
In her newest novel, Audition, Kitamura commits yet another narrative sleight of hand, creating a scaffolding that results in a story more experimental and daring than in her previous books, and perhaps—certainly for those who can accept the challenges of a fluctuating narrative—even more satisfying to read. The reader must put aside all expectation and follow Kitamura through an increasingly astounding narrative landscape. Eventually, a coda provides a possible breadcrumb f
BookBrowse Editorial Review
The Café with No Name
by Robert Seethaler
(2/26/2025)
Robert Seethaler's novel The Café with No Name, published by Europa in translation by Katy Derbyshire from the original German, is set in Vienna twenty-one years after the war has ended, though the specter of war still blows across a melancholy cityscape.

Seethaler is a thoughtful chronicler of the small world within a world, the simple, the humble, and the modest. The relationships between his characters provide pockets of warmth in an indifferent city, as lonely
BookBrowse Editorial Review
Hideous Kinky: A Novel
by Esther Freud
(1/29/2025)
The young narrator is not a stand-in for an adult looking back at her youth, but an authentic child, whom Freud conveys beautifully as a full-fledged, if small, person, and many-faceted as most children are—innocent, clever, observant, capricious—and generally willing to move through new experiences as long as her emotionally anchored family is nearby. Morocco has historically been a family-oriented culture, and the author avoids exoticizing the novel's local characters in favor
BookBrowse Editorial Review
Margo's Got Money Troubles: A Novel
by Rufi Thorpe
(11/20/2024)
Thorpe's twenty-year-old protagonist, Margo, has many troubles, of which money seems the most looming. Her life has taken a sudden, skidding U-turn, and she is experiencing a kind of existential whiplash. Margo is inexperienced and naïve, and when her favorite community college English professor first made it clear that he wanted to have a sexual relationship with her, she didn't even quite realize that she had a choice in the matter. After the relationship ends, she discovers she i
BookBrowse Editorial Review
Small Rain: A Novel
by Garth Greenwell
(9/4/2024)
The novel is mostly set in the ICU, where the narrator is tethered to his hospital bed with IV lines and sensors, but where his mind roams freely and widely. Greenwell is a master at creating intimacy; the poet seems to speak directly to the reader, and his narrative voice is compelling: sometimes self-critical and dismissive of his perceptions, but also empathic and reflective... As the poet is experiencing his own unique medical crisis, the outside world faces an unprecedented pandemic; both t
BookBrowse Editorial Review
Blue Ruin: A Novel
by Hari Kunzru
(7/17/2024)
Like Red Pill and White Tears, the first two novels in Hari Kunzru's loosely connected Three-Colors trilogy, Blue Ruin stands alone as both a powerful novel of ideas and a compelling story. Although the three books are entirely different in theme, character, and setting, each focuses on specific cultural moments of the recent past. Blue Ruin alternates between the London art scene during the final years of the 20th century—in its exhilarating heyday
BookBrowse Editorial Review
Anita de Monte Laughs Last: A Novel
by Xochitl Gonzalez
(5/1/2024)
In Xochitl Gonzalez's second novel, Anita de Monte Laughs Last, readers are in for another thrilling ride. Again, the author delivers a satisfying, propulsive story as she relates the sometimes-parallel experiences faced by two Latina women who, a decade apart, must each navigate elitist, alien environments. As her characters confront the mores and expectations of the New York art world and Ivy League academia, Gonzalez points a high beam into the shadows to locate the traps of race, ge
BookBrowse Editorial Review
Table for Two: Fictions
by Amor Towles
(4/3/2024)
Amor Towles's short story collection Table for Two reads as something of a dream compilation for those of us who have dearly wished we could spend just a bit more time in the company of his characters and in the fully imagined settings of his novels Rules of Civility (2011), A Gentleman in Moscow (2016) and The Lincoln Highway (2021). It appears that the author may have felt that way, too. The general sensibility, gentle humor and expert storytelling we as
BookBrowse Editorial Review
Prophet Song
by Paul Lynch
(2/7/2024)
Lynch understands that totalitarianism doesn't simply storm into power; all too often it creeps in, exploiting minor, seemingly harmless administrative policies and incrementally asphyxiating democratic mores, leaving only the specter of terror as the ruling party, their ambitions unmasked, declares that those who are not with us are against us. As the novel proceeds, readers follow Eilish through a cold Kafkaesque nightmare in which family members can get no information about missing relati
BookBrowse Editorial Review
The House of Doors
by Tan Twan Eng
(11/1/2023)
In writing The House of Doors, Twan Eng effectively reverse engineers the work of the real-life Maugham, using his book of short stories The Casuarina Tree to envision a context within which the author might have been sparked to create his fiction. In so doing, Twan Eng crafts a novel that has much to say about the very art of narrative crafting, and structurally functions as something of an infinity mirror held up to a repeating interplay between fiction and nonfiction.
BookBrowse Editorial Review
The MANIAC
by Benjamin Labatut
(10/4/2023)
At once historian, biographer, philosopher, and poet, Labatut is adept at eloquently communicating complex ideas in an accessible but not overly simplified style. The MANIAC will appeal to a wide variety of people, from those knowledgeable about math and physics to those, like this reader, with a decidedly more humanities-based education. Labatut creates fully fleshed actors and brings events from the past into sharp, clear focus.
BookBrowse Editorial Review
Loot: A Novel
by Tania James
(8/2/2023)
As in any exceptional novel, resonances and subthemes run like an underground river throughout the book—most obvious in this case is the impact of the British in India and the never-overstated reminder of how deeply a country's course of history can be altered by a foreign civilization imposing its own modes. The British swept through the region with a great sense of their own destiny, and in doing so, deprived local cultures of their own.
BookBrowse Editorial Review
The Postcard
by Anne Berest
(6/7/2023)
The novel is at once a closely depicted, meticulous account of the lives of the Rabinovitch family and the ways in which their terrible fate has resonated in the lives of their descendants; a fascinating, true-life mystery involving detectives and handwriting analyst; and a powerful account of the occupation of France and the unfurling, systemic reinforcement of antisemitism through the Vichy government's administrative practices.

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