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January 2008
- Eckhart Tolle. A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life's Purpose
- Tolle presents readers with an honest look at the current state of humanity: he implores us to see and accept that this state, which is based on an erroneous identification with the egoic mind, is one of dangerous insanity. However, there is an alternative to this potentially dire situation. Humanity now, perhaps more than in any previous time, has an opportunity to create a new, saner, more loving world. This will involve a radical inner leap from the current egoic consciousness to an entirely new one. In illuminating the nature of this shift, Tolle describes in detail how our current ego-based state of consciousness operates. Then gently, and in very practical terms, he leads us into this new consciousness. We will come to experience who we truly are--which is something infinitely greater than anything we currently think we are.
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November 2007
- Ken Follett. Pillars of the Earth
- Set in 12th-century England, the narrative concerns the building of a cathedral in the fictional town of Kingsbridge. The ambitions of three men merge, conflict and collide through 40 years of social and political upheaval as internal church politics affect the progress of the cathedral and the fortunes of the protagonists..
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October 2007
- Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Love In The Time of Cholera
- A patient Colombian man waits 50 years for a second chance with the love of his life.
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June 2007
Jeffrey Eugenides. Middlesex
- Spanning eight decades, Eugenides's long-awaited second novel is a grand, utterly original fable of crossed bloodlines, the intricacies of gender, and the deep, untidy promptings of desire.
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March 2007
- Cormac McCarthy. The Road
- America is a barren landscape of smoldering ashes, devoid of life except for those people still struggling to scratch out some type of existence. Amidst the destruction, a father and his young son walk, always toward the coast, but with no real understanding that circumstances will improve once they arrive. Still they persevere, and their relationship comes to represent goodness in a world that is utterly devastate.
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January 2007
- Sidney Poitier. The Measure of a Man
- In this luminous memoir, a true American icon looks back on his celebrated life and career. His body of work is arguably the most morally significant in cinematic history, and the power and influence of that work are indicative of the character of the man behind the many storied roles. In "The Measure of a Man," Sidney Poitier explores these elements of character and personal values to take his own measure -- as a man, as a husband and a father, and as an actor. He explores the nature of sacrifice and commitment, pride and humility, rage and forgiveness, and paying the price for artistic integrity. What emerges is a picture of a man seeking truth, passion, and balance in the face of limits -- his own and the world's.
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January 2006
- Elie Wiesel.
Night
- A terrifying account of the Nazi death camp horror that turns a young Jewish boy into an agonized witness to the death of his family...the death of his innocence...and the death of his God. Penetrating and powerful, as personal as The Diary Of Anne Frank, Night awakens the shocking memory of evil at its absolute and carries with it the unforgettable message that this horror must never be allowed to happen again
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September 2005
- James Frey. A
Million Little Pieces
- When he entered a residential treatment center at the age of
twenty-three, James Frey had destroyed his body and his mind almost
beyond repair. He faced a stark choice: accept that he wasn't
going to see twenty-four or step into the fallout of his smoking
wreck of a life and take drastic action. Surrounded by patients
as troubled as he - including a judge, a mobster, a former world-champion
boxer, and a fragile former prostitute - and a droning dogma of
How to Recover, Frey had to fight to find his own way to confront
the consequences of the life he had lived so far, and to determine
what future, if any, he holds.
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June 2005
- William Faulkner. Light
In August
- The story od Lena Grove's search for the father of her unborn
child, and features one of Faulkner's most memorable characters:
Joe Christmas, a desperate drifter consumed by his mixed ancestry.
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June 2005
- William Faulkner. The
Sound And The Fury
-
By turns lyrical and dramatic, hilarious and heartbreaking,
The Sound and the Fury is the tragic story of beautiful Caddy
Comapson and the dissolution of her family.
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June 2005
- William Faulkner. As
I Lay Dying
- The harrowing, darkly comic tale of the Bundren family's trek
across Mississippi to bury Addie, their wife and mother, as told
by each of the family members--including Addie herself.
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September 2004
- Pearl S. Buck. The
Good Earth
- This great modern classic depicts life in China at a time before
the vast political and social upheavals transformed an essentially
agrarian country into a world power. Nobel Prize-winner Pearl
S. Buck traces the whole cycle of life--its terrors, its passions,
its ambitions, and rewards. Includes biographical and historical
information and more.
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June 2004
- Leo Tolstoy. Anna
Karenina
- Anna Karenina has beauty, social position, wealth, a husband,
and an adored son, but her existence seems empty. When she meets
the dashing officer Count Vronsky she rejects her marriage and
turns to him to fulfill her passionate nature -- with devastating
results. One of the world's greatest novels, Anna Karenina is
both an immortal drama of personal conflict and social scandal
and a vivid, richly textured panorama of nineteenth-century Russia.
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April 2004
- Carson McCullers. The
Heart Is A Lonely Hunter
- A sensitive teenage girl discovers the meaning of loneliness.
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January 2004
- Gabriel Garcia Marquez. One
Hundred Years of Solitude
- A classic of world literature for all time--and probably Marquez's
most famous work. "The first piece of literature since the Book
of Genesis that should be required reading for the entire human
race . . . with more lucidity, wit, wisdom, and poetry than is
expected from 100 years of novelists, let alone one man".--Washington
Post Book World.
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September 2003
- Alan Paton. Cry,
the Beloved Country
- Paton's deeply moving story of Zulu pastor Stephen Kumalo and
his son Absalom, set against the backdrop of a land and people
driven by racial inequality and injustice, remains the most famous
and important novel in South Africa's history.
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- June 2003
- John Steinbeck. East
of Eden
- This
sprawling and often brutal novel, set in the rich farmlands of
California's Salinas Valley, follows the intertwined destinies
of two families--the Trasks and the Hamiltons--whose generations
helplessly reenact the fall of Adam and Eve and the poisonous
rivalry of Cain and Abel.
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- April 2002
- Toni Morrison. Sula
- Written
by one of the most important novelists in America today, Sula
is a rich and moving novel that traces the lives of two black
heroines--from their growing up together in a small Ohio town,
through their sharply divergent paths of womanhood, to their ultimate
confrontation and reconciliation.
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- January 2002
- Ann-Marie MacDonald. Fall
on Your Knees
- A bestseller in Canada, this riveting family saga takes readers
from Cape Breton Island to the battlefields of World War I to
New York City's jazz scene--and into the lives, and guilty secrets,
of four remarkable sisters.
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- November 2001
- Rohinton Mistry. A
Fine Balance
- The eagerly awaited novel from the author of the award-winning
Such a Long Journey is set in India in the mid-1970s. A "State
of Internal Emergency" has been declared, and in the days of bleakness
and hope that follow, four disparate people find their lives becoming
unexpectedly and inextricably entwined.
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- September 2001
- Jonathan Franzen. The
Corrections
- A comic, tragic masterpiece of an American family breaking
down in an age of easy fixes, Franzen's third novel brings an
old-time America into wild collision with the era of home surveillance
and New Economy speculation. Winner of the National
Book Award.
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- June 2001
- Lalita Tademy. Cane
River
- Based on the author's own search of her family's past, "Cane
River" is an epic novel based on the lives of four generations
of African-American women. Beginning with Tademy's great-great-great-great-grandmother,
Elisabeth, this is a saga that sweeps from the early days of slavery
through the Civil War and into a pre-Civil Rights South--a unique
and moving slice of America's past that will resonate with readers
for years to come.
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- May 2001
- Malika Oufkir.
Stolen Lives: Twenty Years in a Desert Jail
- The adopted daughter of the king of Morocco, whose father was
arrested and executed for a 1972 attempt to assassinate the king,
tells the story of how she, her mother, and her five siblings
endured years of imprisonment in a desert penal colony
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- March 2001
- Gwyn Hyman Rubio. Icy
Sparks
- The grown up Icy narrates her story of growing up an orphan
in rural Kentucky in the 50s with an affliction that causes tics
and cursing.
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- January 2001
- Joyce Carol Oates. We
Were the Mulvaneys
- This
story spans 25 years in the life of one American family--its rise,
fall, and ultimate redemption.
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- November 2000
- Andre Dubus III. House
of Sand and Fog
- An American tragedy, "The House of Sand and Fog" turns both
the traditional immigrant success story and a modern love story
upside down with a heartrending outcome in a master stroke of
American realism and Shakespearean consequence.
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- September 2000
- Christina Schwarz. Drowning
Ruth
- Amanda Starkey nurses soldiers wounded in the Great War.
When she is overwhelmed she flees to the lake with her younger
sister and three year old niece Ruth.
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- August 2000
- Elizabeth Berg. Open
House
- Fourteen-year-old Holly Fay Lovell leaves the small southern
town where she lives with her mother, a seamstress, in order to
pursue her dream of a singing career, not knowing the whole truth
about her humble beginnings.
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- June 2000
- Barbara Kingsolver. The
Poisonwood Bible
- In her first novel since "Pigs in Heaven", Kingsolver offers
a compelling exploration of religion, conscience, imperialist
arrogance, and the many paths to redemption. An American missionary
and his family travel to the Congo in 1959, a time of tremendous
political and social upheaval. Web feature.
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- May 2000
- Sue Miller. While
I Was Gone
- A decade after her phenomenal bestseller, "The Good Mother",
Miller delivers an exquisitely suspenseful novel about how casually
a marriage can be destroyed and how a good wife can place all
she holds dear at risk.
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- April 2000
- Toni Morrison. The
Bluest Eye
- The Bluest Eye, published in 1970, is the first novel written
by Toni Morrison, winner of the 1993 Nobel Prize in Literature.
It is the story of eleven-year-old Pecola Breedlove -- a black
girl in an America whose love for its blond, blue-eyed children
can devastate all others -- who prays for her eyes to turn blue:
so that she will be beautiful, so that people will look at her,
so that her world will be different. This is the story of the
nightmare at the heart of her yearning, and the tragedy of its
fulfillment.
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- March 2000
- Tawni O'Dell.
Back Roads
- With his abusive father dead and his mother in jail, 19-year-old
Harley Altmyer has given up on college to care for three needy
younger sisters. Can he rise to the occasion? More important,
will the sexy mom of his baby sister's best friend provide a much-needed
tumble in the hay?
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- February 2000
- Isabel Allende. Daughter
of Fortune
- From acclaimed international bestselling author Isabel Allende
comes this dazzling historical novel, a sweeping portrait of an
unconventional woman carving her own destiny in an era defined
by violence, passion, and adventure.
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- January 2000
- Robert Morgan. Gap
Creek
- Gap Creek is the gripping story of one young woman's courage
in the face of the hardships of 19th-century country life. In
Julie Harmon, a woman of strength, grace and immeasurable courage,
Robert Morgan has created one of the most admirable and unforgettable
heroines in modern American literature.
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- December 1999
- Jane Hamilton.
A Map of the World
- One June morning, Alice Goodwin is trying to keep both her
tempter and her tendency to blame herself for her entire family's
shortcomings in check. Torn between a yearning for solitude and
a deep need to be at the center of a perfect family, Alice finds
life on the Goodwin farm isn't turning out quite as she had envisioned.
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- November 1999
- A. Manette Ansay. Vinegar
Hill
- Dutifully accompanying her unemployed husband back to her in-law's
cold and loveless house, Ellen Grier finds that she must struggle
to keep her passionate spirit alive as she searches for the inner
strength to endure an all-pervading darkness that threatens to
destroy everything she is and everyone she loves.
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- October 1999
- Breena Clarke. River,
Cross My Heart
- Six-year-old Clara Bynum is dead, drowned in the Potomac River
in the shadow of an apparently haunted rock outcropping known
locally as the Three Sisters. In scenes alive with emotional truth,
the story weighs the effect of Clara's absence on the people she
has left behind: her parents; the family's friends and relatives
in their Georgetown neighborhood; and, most especially, Clara's
twelve-year-old sister Johnnie Mae, who must come to terms with
her sister's death as she struggles to discover the kind of woman
she will become.
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- September 1999
- Maeve Binchy. Tara
Road
- The story about two women who switch lives, and by so doing,
learn much about each other -- and themselves. Set in both Ireland
and New England, "Tara Road" demonstrates Binchy's incomparable
understanding of the human heart.
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- June 1999
- Melinda Haynes. Mother
of Pearl
- This debut work captures the irony and beauty of life in the
1950s Deep South, centering around 28-year-old Even Grade, a Mississippi
black man who grew up an orphan, and Valuable Korner, the 15-year-old
daughter of the town whore. Both are passionately determined to
discover the precious things neither expected as children: human
connection, enduring commitment, and above all, unconditional
love.
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- May 1999
- Janet Fitch. White
Oleander
- A bestselling first novel about a young woman growing up the
hard way, this is a powerful story of mothers and daughters, their
ambiguous alliances, and the search for love and identity. When
a woman murders a former lover and is imprisoned for life, her
daughter must navigate a new reality--that of a series of foster
homes, each its own universe, each with its own limits and dangers.
"A ferocious, risk-loving novel."--"Los Angeles Times Book Review."
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- March 1999
- Anita Shreve. The
Pilot's Wife
- A pilot's wife is taught to be prepared for the late-night
knock at the door. But when Kathryn Lyons receives word that a
plane flown by her husband, Jack, has exploded near the coast
of Ireland, she confronts the unfathomable-one startling revelation
at a time. Soon drawn into a maelstrom of publicity fueled by
rumors that Jack led a secret life. Kathryn sets out to learn
who her husband really was, whatever that knowledge might cost.
Her search propels this taut, impassioned book as it movingly
explores the question, How well can we ever really know another
person.
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- February 1999
- Bernhard Schlink. The
Reader
- Hailed for its coiled eroticism and the moral claims it makes
upon the reader, this mesmerizing novel is a story of love and
secrets, horror and compassion, unfolding against the haunted
landscape of postwar Germany.
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- January 1999
- Bret Lott. Jewel
- In the backwoods of Mississippi, a land of honeysuckle and
grapevine, Jewel and her husband, Leston, are truly blessed; they
have five fine children. When Brenda Kay is born in 1943, Jewel
gives thanks for a healthy baby, last-born and most welcome. "Jewel"
is the story of how quickly a life can change; how, like lightning,
an unforeseen event can set us on a course without reason or compass.
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- December 1998
- Billie Letts. Where
the Heart Is
- Abandoned by her boyfriend at a Wal-Mart in Oklahoma, Novalee
Nation, 17 years old and seven months pregnant, soon discovers
the treasures hiding in this small Southwest town.
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- October 1998
- Chris Bohjalian. Midwives
- On an icy winter night in an isolated house in rural Vermont,
a seasoned midwife named Sibyl Danforth takes desperate measures
to save a baby's life. She performs an emergency cesarean section
on a mother she believes has died of a stroke. but what if Sibyl's
patient wasn't dead - and Sibyl inadvertently killed her? As Sibyl
faces the antagonism of the law, the hostility of traditional
doctors, and the accusations of her own conscience, Midwives engages,
moves, and transfixes us as only the very best novels ever do.
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- September 1998
- Pearl Cleage. What
Looks Like Crazy on an Ordinary Day
- This highly praised debut novel by a renowned African-American
playwright/essayist is a gritty yet warm and inspiring story of
hope, love, and homecoming.
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- June 1998
- Wally Lamb. I
Know This Much is True
- The primary action is narrated by Dominick Birdsey, the identical
twin of Thomas, a schizophrenic. At age 40, Dominick confronts
his imperfect past. He is faced with the challenge of expiating
his and his ancestors' sins and renovating his life. Here the
author confronts the existential aloneness of the human condition.
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- May 1998
- Edwidge Danticat. Breath,
Eyes, Memory
- An unforgettable novel that shimmers with the wonder and terror
of its author's native Haiti. Set in the island's impoverished
villages and in New York's Haitian community, this is the story
of Sophie Caco, who was conceived in an act of violence, abandoned
by her mother and then summoned to America. In New York, Sophie
discovers that Haiti imposes harsh rules on its own.
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- April 1998
- Anna Quindlen. Black
and Blue
- A stunning novel about a marriage that begins in passion and
becomes violent, by the Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist and author
of "Thinking Out Loud". After she runs away from her abusive husband,
Fran Benedetto lives in fear of discovery, yet also with increasing
confidence, freedom, and hope, as she struggles to create a new
life for herself and her son.
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- March 1998
- Alice Hoffman.
Here on Earth
- After nearly 20 years of living in California, March Murray
and her daughter Gwen return to March's small Massachusetts hometown.
Thrust into the world of her past, March slowly comes to realize
the complexity of the choices made by those around her, including
Hollis, the boy she loved--now the man she can't seem to stay
away from.
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- January 1998
- Toni Morrison.
Paradise
- "The last classic American writer" ("Newsweek") challenges
our most fiercely held beliefs as she weaves folklore and history,
memory and myth, into an unforgettable meditation on race, religion,
gender, and the way a society can turn in on itself until it explodes.
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- December 1997
- Bill Cosby. The
Best Way to Play
- Little Bill and his friends, avid fans of the television show
"Space Explorers," clamor to get the video game version, but they
find that they have more fun using their imagination while playing
outside.
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- December 1997
- Bill Cosby. The
Meanest Thing to Say
- When a new boy in his second grade class tries to get the other
students to play a game that involves saying the meanest things
possible to one another, Little Bill shows him a better way to
make friends.
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- December 1997
- Bill Cosby. The
Treasure Hunt
- One rainy day while his father listens to his old records,
his mother polishes a silver platter, and his brother enjoys his
baseball card collection, Little Bill discovers his own treasure
, a talent for storytelling.
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- October 1997
- Kaye Gibbons.
Ellen Foster
- Having suffered abuse and misfortune for much of her life,
a young child searches for a better life and finally gets a break
in the home of a loving woman with several foster children.
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- October 1997
- Kaye Gibbons. A
Virtuous Woman
- In flashbacks, two richly cadenced Southern voices explore
vastly different backgrounds, troubled histories and an unlikely
but loving marriage. - Publishers Weekly review.
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- September 1997
- Ernest J Gaines. A
Lesson Before Dying
- Black schoolteacher, Grant Wiggins, restores a sense of dignity
to Jefferson, a black man wrongly condemned to die. The setting
is a small 1940s Cajun Louisiana community.
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- June 1997
- Mary McGarry Morris. Songs
in Ordinary Time
- Songs in Ordinary Time is set in the summer of 1960 - the last
of quiet times and America's innocence. It centers on Marie Fermoyle,
a strong but vulnerable divorced woman whose loneliness and ambition
for her children make her easy prey for the dangerous con man
Omar Duvall.
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- May 1997
- Maya Angelou. The
Heart of a Woman
- This engaging book chronicles the changes in Maya Angelou's
life as she enters the hub of activity that is New York. There,
at the Harlem Writers Guild, she rededicates herself to writing,
and finds love at an unexpected moment. Reflecting on her many
roles--from northern coordinator of Martin Luther King's history-making
quest to mother of a rebellious teenage son--Angelou eloquently
speaks to an awareness of the heart within us all.
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- April 1997
- Sheri Reynolds.
The Rapture of Canaan
- From the author of Bitterroot Landing--hailed by the Richmond
State as "a splendid contribution to Southern literature"--comes
a stunning story woven around the themes of innocence and miracles
in everyday life. When the granddaughter of the founder of an
isolated religious community in South Carolina is discovered to
be pregnant, no amount of punishment will make her recant her
statement that a holy child grows inside her.
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- February 1997
- Ursula Hegi. Stones
from the River
- A stunning novel about ordinary people living in extraordinary
times--set in a small German town and spanning both world wars.
Through the voice of the town's unofficial historian and conscience,
Hegi explores the secrets, the actions, and lack of action that
shapes the residents' fates.
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- January 1997
- Wally Lamb. She's
Come Undone
- An extraordinary coming-of-age odyssey, She's Come Undone tells
the story of Dolores Price, a dysfunctional, heartbreakingly comical
young heroine, and her wild journey to love, pain, and renewal.
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- November 1996
- Jane Hamilton. The
Book of Ruth
- A standout in the crowd of first novels, Ruth narrates a story
that confronts real-life issues of alienation and violence from
which Hamilton creates a stunning testament to the human capacity
for mercy, compassion, and love.
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- November 1996
- Toni Morrison. Song
of Solomon
- In Song of Solomon, Nobel Prize-winning author Toni Morrison
creates a new way of rendering the contradictory nuances of black
life in America. The novel's earthy, poetic language and striking
use of folklore and myth helped establish Morrison as a major
voice in contemporary fiction.
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- September 1996
- Jacquelyn Mitchard. The
Deep End of the Ocean
- An unforgettable debut of a major storyteller, this bestselling
novel recounts every mother's most terrifying nightmare: the disappearance
of her child.
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