Between Them: Remembering My Parents
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From the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Sportswriter comes a deeply personal account of his...
Autobiography essays
Surprisingly Down to Earth, and Very Funny
Book
The hysterical, shocking and incredibly intimate memoir from one of the most original and unique...
"I'm not looking for my fifteen minutes of fame. I'm looking for a paycheck."
So I've never read anything by Colleen Hoover, but so many of my Goodreads friends were raving about this romantic thriller. When I saw that I could read it via Kindle Unlimited, I jumped at the chance. It was definitely an interesting read and one that really picked up in the second half. It's a different sort of tale, too, which made it a refreshing read. Be prepared for a dark story--Verity and Jeremy have lost both of their young twin daughters, and now Verity is injured as well. Verity's autobiography is not light reading, and overall, the story is a creepy, bleak tale.
"I think Verity might have made up the term. After our daughters died, she said we were Chronics. Prone to chronic tragedy. One terrible thing after another."
When Lowen comes to the Crawford home, she picks up on some of this eerie energy that permeates the book. However, Hoover makes sure that we know that Lowen is an unreliable narrator as well. She's a sleepwalker, often so tired that she herself isn't sure if she's sure of what she's seeing or hallucinating from exhaustion. As a reader, we aren't sure who to trust. It makes for an engaging story, where you are never sure what (or who) to believe.
"My mother used to say that houses have a soul, and if that is true, the soul of Verity Crawford's house is as dark as they come."
Overall, I'm not sure I can rave about this one quite as much as some reviews I've read, but I did enjoy it. It's a quick read, it's ominous and spooky, and there are some great dramatic twists and turns. The ending makes up for a lot, so I would certainly say it's worth a read. I know that a lot of Hoover's books are not quite like this one, but I still look forward to reading some of her other books.
Dr Richard Shepherd, as one of the UK’s top forensic pathologists, has performed over 23,000 postmortems; that’s a lot of dead bodies! Fascinated by cracking the puzzle of what killed each one this book covers a whole host of unusual cases. Clearing up many misconceptions of the world of forensic pathology we get a great insight into a job few people could stomach.
As he covers many interesting cases we get a unique behind the curtain look into some famous murders and disasters. Shipman, Stephen Lawrence, the Hungerford massacre, the Marchioness disaster, he is even involved in Diana’s inquest. The look into the very difficult area of the death of babies shows a complicated area where everything is not as black and white as we’d like it to be.
His single minded quest for the truth and the very distressing nature of his work takes a toll on his mental health and family life. Although not as fascinating as the cases themselves it’s important to cover this, bring into sharp focus the debt society owes to those willing to surround themselves in such a grim profession.
The Life and Loves of a He Devil: A Memoir
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'It seems to me that we are all made up of the things we adore, and by telling my stories through...
The Stock Picker: A Financial History from the Sharp End
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Paul Mumford is a noted stock-picker with over 50 years' experience in the markets - first as a...
Unchosen: The Memoirs of a Philo-Semite
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'They say you never get over your first love and in my case, they were right. But, typically greedy,...
Unlikely Warrior: A Pacifist Rabbis Journey from the Pulpit to Iwo Jima
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A brilliant student, orator, and debater, Rabbi Roland Gittelsohn was an outspoken social activist...
We All Dance to a Mysterious Tune: Stange Stories, Poems and Essays, the Confessions of a Feminine Man
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An intimate autobiography describing the personal and sexual life of a poet working in the retail...
Why This World: A Biography of Clarice Lispector
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"That rare person who looked like Marlene Dietrich and wrote like Virginia Woolf," Clarice Lispector...