
The Burial Society
Book
A woman running from a dark past stumbles upon a tangled nest of seductions and secrets in this...
general fiction

Masterclass: Get Your Book Published: Teach Yourself: Discover How to Find a Great Publisher for Your Book
Book
LEARN HOW TO FIND A PUBLISHER AND GET YOUR BOOK PUBLISHED. Do you have a completed manuscript ready...

A Perfect Spy
Book
le Carre's most autobiographical novel is also widely held to be his masterpiece, and the finest spy...

The Complete Richard Hannay Stories
John Buchan and Keith Carabine
Book
Major General Sir Richard Hannay is the fictional secret agent created by writer and diplomat John...

The Marlowe Papers
Book
Winner of the 2013 Desmond Eliott Award for New Fiction On May 30th, 1593, a celebrated young...

Chocolate a la Murder
Book
Maddie gets rattled by a candy-coated murder. It's Wine and Chocolate Days in San Benedetto, and...
General Fiction (Adult) Mystery Cozy

LilyLovesIndie (123 KP) rated Watersheds of World History in Books
Nov 5, 2018

Hazel (1853 KP) rated Polaris Awakening (Polaris Anthology, #1) in Books
Dec 17, 2018

Germany: Beyond the Enchanted Forest: A Literary Anthology
Book
'German military figures had a certain terrifying glamour,' wrote Patrick Leigh Fermor, recalling...

Kayleigh (12 KP) rated The Clock Of Life in Books
Jan 2, 2019
This book gets a middling 3 stars from me. I found the character development to be really detailed, and I felt as though I knew the characters by the end. As the blurb already mentions, the main focus of the book is on Jason Lee. Starting from when he began school and ending with a relationship and career choice as a teenager, this book is Jason's journey through childhood.
The reason it didn't rate any higher for me though is that I found it to be fairly slow paced, and at times weighed down with politics that as an English woman, I didn't completely connect with. Plotwise, while things did happen, it didn't become exciting until right at the end.
The message about race is a good one, and the book highlights how far attitudes towards race have come. I did enjoy it, although maybe not in the way I enjoyed a book like The Hunger Games, where I felt a sense of satisfaction and couldn't wait to read more. If you like bildungsromans/coming-of-age stories, I'd definitely recommend it.