book reviews
Reviews of books by relationship gurus, dating experts, and cautionary tale-tellers.
Women are from where again?
Note. The Manley book is a work of fiction. It was born out of a situation where I had heard it said one time too many that: “All men are dogs.” If that is true, I thought to myself, then, who breeds and trains them? And a book was born. It's available on Amazon.
By E. Lloyd K6 years ago in Humans
Knee Deep By Karol Hoeffner
Synopsis Named after a hurricane, Camille is the rebellious 16-year-old daughter of a New Orleans bar-owner who grows up in the shadow of Bourbon Street, raised on stories of hauntings, lusty encounters and voodoo magic. And even though her family loses their home in a hurricane, she counts herself among the lucky until she discovers that her 18-year-old Creole neighbor whom she secretly loves died heroically in the storm. Devastated by Antwone's death, Camille begins taking unnecessary risks as if to prove she can be safe in an unsafe world. Her downward spiral is stopped by a spirit intercession. Based on the strength of her love and with the help of a dead voodoo queen, Camille wills Antwone back to earth. Because she is the only one who can see him; not his grandmother or his ex-girlfriend - she takes a kind of ownership of him in death that she never had in life. But gradually, she seeks something in their union beyond sex or love or passion—an understanding of the thin line between life and death itself and a need to find answers where none might lie. Camille's story unfolds as a Mardi Gras memoir, one girl's journey through the parties and parades as her community comes together and rises up from the chaos following the devastating storm. Like all good tales born of the bayou, hers involves the dead, the living, and the one trapped in the brackish waters between heaven and hell; a story of true love and true disaster.
By Ashley Nestler, MSW6 years ago in Humans
Attached?!
Have you ever wondered why your relationships are the way they are and why you experience love the way you do? For years, it has been a question on my mind that feels like an endless dating pool that doesn't seem to pan out. Was I looking for love in the wrong places?
By Lauren Eimicke6 years ago in Humans
What If It's Us
I don’t really know where to start with this one because I am still processing the overwhelming feeling of enjoyment washing over me. I could not put this book down! I thought that this book was brilliantly written, fabulously executed, and brought a genius concept to life. Written by two amazing authors, “What If It’s Us” is an absolute pleasure to read from start to finish.
By Kurt Mason6 years ago in Humans
Until We Meet Again
The history of this planet we call home is riddled with many highs and many lows. I believe we can all agree that 2020 has been a low year in more ways than one. Something I've realized during these troubling times is how distant and removed the crisis around us can feel when we aren't experiencing it or being impacted by it first-hand. I had a similar revelation when reading "Until We Meet Again: A True Story of Love and Survival in The Holocaust".
By Ciara Brooke6 years ago in Humans
Through The Mind's Eye...
There are days when, for some reason, I feel out of sorts. Not sick or ill, just not myself. Some years ago, I apparently suffered from depression, so I am acutely aware of what that particular experience is all about. This time however, I could not place a finger on what it truly was that was bothering me, so I decided that having been doing this internal work for some fourteen months now, I knew how to explore this further.
By Joseph Willson6 years ago in Humans
Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage
Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage is a collection of 9 short stories written about ordinary people living in Canada. Character lines are completely people you can see anywhere, existing sometimes even in yourself. And the story sketched under the pen of Alice Munro is just like everyday stories that mothers often murmur to each other when they have the opportunity to gossip. A woman suffering from a disease, the relationship between her two grandchildren, childhood love now suddenly meets again or the elderly with brain disease are moved to a nursing home. Alice Munro didn't have a big sword, visualizing her characters beyond normal to everyday life.
By Thao Thao Tran6 years ago in Humans
A Single Green Light
A Single Green Light The Great Gatsby (1925, F. Scott Fitzgerald) by Liv Atterson Francis Scott Fitzgerald is one of the greatest American authors to ever live. His works have sold millions of copies and still do almost one-hundred years later. Mostly known for his book The Great Gatsby, a book that is not even 200 pages, is one of the most celebrated works in American literature. This story is told during the summer of 1922 and focuses on the life of Jay Gatsby--a self-made millionaire, who lives next door to our narrator Nick Carraway. With Fitzgerald's novel's known to hold an abundance of symbolism, one of the most iconic symbols being the green light. Is the light at the end of Daisy's dock a symbol of wealth or is it a symbol of desire for Daisy's herself? When readers first see Gatsby he is fixated on the green light and as his relationship with daisy slowly evolves, the connection of Daisy and the green light slowly becomes stronger.
By Liv Atterson6 years ago in Humans










