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The Arab of the Future: Volume 1: A Childhood in the Middle East, 1978-1984 - A Graphic Memoir
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VOLUME 1 IN THE UNFORGETTABLE STORY OF AN EXTRAORDINARY CHILDHOODA GUARDIAN BOOK OF THE YEAR...
Humans are Underrated: What High Achievers Know That Brilliant Machines Never Will
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What hope will there be for us when computers can drive cars better than humans, do intricate legal...
Gran Canaria Marco Polo Pocket Guide
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Fully revised and updated for 2016. Now with new Discovery Tours chapter. Marco Polo Gran Canaria:...
Walden by Henry David Thoreau
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Two years, two months and two days! This is what forms the time line of one man's quest for the...
Rhythm Alchemy: In Search of the Philospher's Stone
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According to Socrates, humans have nothing more to learn because we already know everything we need...
The Constant Princess (The Plantagenet and Tudor Novels, #6)
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"I am Catalina, Princess of Spain, daughter of the two greatest monarchs the world has ever...
From Brain to Mind: The Developmental Journey from Mimicry to Creative Thought Through Experience and Education
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Finalist for Foreword Magazine's 2011 Book of the YearWith his knack for making science intelligible...
A Small Circus
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A Small Circus is a powerful 1931 portrayal of a German town on the brink of chaos, from bestselling...
Kristy H (1252 KP) rated The Distant Dead in Books
Mar 4, 2021
I really loved Heather Young's book The Lost Girls, and The Distant Dead didn't disappoint either. She excels at creating excellent atmospheric novels with well-drawn characters. The Distant Dead perfectly captures small town life: how nearly everyone knows almost everything about everyone, but rarely interferes. How a small town can feel so stifling and claustrophobic. How the secrets and lies pile up until a man finds himself burned to death.
Young also covers the timely topics of drugs and addiction, which run as a thread across the book. Opiates don't seem like a tired trope here, though, but something that is eating up the town and ruining people's lives. It's no secret that I'm a sucker for a book with a good kid character, and I pretty much fell for Sal immediately. He's a great kid: real, vulnerable yet tough, and smart. He was an excellent narrator, with his portions telling what led up to Adam's death and Nora and Jake (a local EMT/firefighter) telling us what happened after. The book is surprisingly tense, with Young's beautifully written words jumping off every page. She's such a lyrical writer, weaving an amazing tale of sadness and redemption.
This isn't a fast read or a page-turning thriller. But it's a well-written book, with characters you won't soon forget. There's a lovely, albeit sad and dark, story here. Definitely worth a read. 4+ stars.
