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Judi S

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

Judi Sauerbrey has retired from 35+ years teaching HS and college literature. She was director of women's studies at a Midwestern college for a number of years. She now lives in SE Indiana with her husband and three canine companions. She presently teaches in a continuing education program for adults, continues the quilting she's done for years, is a fan of any kind of mystery but especially cozies, and is revising manuscripts of her own novels in a number of genres.

BookBrowse Editorial Reviews (4)

BookBrowse Editorial Review
The Promise
by Ann Weisgarber
(4/9/2014)
The Promise is a gripping, tautly woven story of love, loss, pain and struggle. It is a fascinating hodgepodge of churning emotions and grace (or lack of it) under pressure. It leads readers to wonder if in the wake of nature's supreme power and devastation, can any of the characters ever again be what they were.
BookBrowse Editorial Review
The Invention of Wings
by Sue Monk Kidd
(1/8/2014)
The relationships between the characters in The Invention of Wings and their struggles – both real and imagined – bring a deeply polarized time in American history vividly to life. This is a page-turning narrative, with intricate plot twists, by a truly riveting storyteller.
BookBrowse Editorial Review
The Valley of Amazement
by Amy Tan
(11/6/2013)
Written in flowing prose that sweeps the reader down an adventurous path from late nineteenth century America to the cusp of World War II in China, this is a portrayal of strong women you will not soon forget. The Valley of Amazement is well worth the long wait.
BookBrowse Editorial Review
The Invention of Murder: How the Victorians Revelled in Death and Detection and Created Modern Crime
by Judith Flanders
(9/4/2013)
It is not often that history can be described by the words "a page-turner," or "I couldn't put it down," but Judith Flanders succeeds on both levels. She provides an intriguing slant on an era about which there are many myths and misconceptions and shows us only too well that we are not so far removed from our ancestors after all.

Reviews (1)

The Romanov Sisters: The Lost Lives of the Daughters of Nicholas and Alexandra
by Helen Rappaport
Lost Daughters of the Last Tsar (5/31/2014)
One upon a time there were 4 princesses: Olga, Tatiana, Maria, and Anastasia But there any resemblance to a traditional fairy tale ends. For these were the daughters of the last Tsar and Tsaritsa of Russia, and the circumstances of their young and tragic end is generally well known. The Romanov Sisters by Helen Rapporport brings them vividly to life and tells the largely unknown story of these young women.who were the Princess Dianas and Kate Middletons of their day, played out against the backdrop of Nicolas' and Alexandra's obsession with a male heir, their mother's religious mania, their baby brother's hemophilia, Rasputin, and oh, yes, the Russian Revolution. This is history that reads like an engrossing novel, and once you have made the acquaintance of the four Romonov sisters, you were never, ever forget them.

BookBrowse Book Club

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When No One Else Will
by Amanda Skenandore
1940s Chicago nurse risks everything at an illegal women’s clinic during a high-profile trial of courage and sisterhood.

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