I Don't Smoke! - Easy Way To Quit Smoking!
Health & Fitness and Medical
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*** LIMITED TIME -50%! *** *** I Don't Smoke - an easy and enjoyable way to quit smoking is based...
Powersat (The Grand Tour #1)
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Two hundred thousand feet up, things go horribly wrong. An experimental low-orbit spaceplane breaks...
Rapid Falls
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Forgive and forget? The past and present collide for two sisters who survived a tragedy—and must...
Addicted (Dark Road #1)
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Original Title: Destroyed Sixteen-year-old Bella Kynaston has been the victim of a brutal rape,...
Contemporary Young Adult
V is for Vengeance (Kinsey Millhone, #22)
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A spiderweb of dangerous relationships lies at the heart of this daring Kinsey Millhone mystery from...
Plaything (My Kinky Housemate #2)
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A one-night stand with my housemate wasn’t the best idea, but that doesn’t stop me from wanting...
BDSM Contemporary MM Romance
73 Dove Street
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When Edie Budd arrives at a shabby West London boarding house in October 1958, carrying nothing...
Historical fiction
Goddess in the Stacks (553 KP) rated Sing, Unburied, Sing in Books
May 14, 2018
In Sing, Unburied, Sing, Jesmyn Ward returns to the same neighborhood in Mississippi that Salvage the Bones was written about. (Two of the siblings from Salvage the Bones show up in a scene in Sing.) The story is told from three different viewpoints: Jojo, a thirteen-year-old boy and the main character of the novel, Leonie, his drug-addicted mother, and Richie, the ghost of a boy Jojo's grandfather met in prison.
This book covers so much that it's difficult to categorize - between discrimination and outright bigotry, bi-racial romance and children, drug addiction, poverty, prison life - deep south gothic, I suppose, would be the best description. Sing really only takes place over a couple of days, but it feels much longer, because Jojo's grandfather tells stories of his time in prison decades prior, Leonie reminisces about high school, and there's just this sense of timelessness over the entire novel.
It's not an easy book. These are hard issues to grapple with, and too many people have to live with these issues. Poverty, bigotry, addiction - these things disproportionately affect the black community, and white people are to blame for the imbalance.
I'm not sure how I feel about the ghost aspect of the book; on one hand I feel like people will see the ghost and decide the book is fantasy - that they don't really need to care about the problems the family faces. On the other hand, the ghost allows us to see even more bigotry and inhumanity targeted at black people. So it serves a purpose.
I'm not sure I like this book. But I'm glad I read it. And that's pretty much going to be my recommendation; it's not a fun read, but it's an important one.
You can find all my reviews at http://goddessinthestacks.wordpress.com
Chelsee R Clawson (23 KP) rated Wicked Deeds on a Winter's Night (Immortals After Dark #4) in Books
Feb 4, 2018
The Word Rhythm Dictionary: A Resource for Writers, Rappers, Poets, and Lyricists
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The Word Rhythm Dictionary: A Resource for Writers, Rappers, Poets, and Lyricists is a new kind of...