Freelance Journalism

Book Reviews

Venetian heartache

This book is a delight for anyone who’s ever tried to sit in a nice cafe and have dinner by themselves while feeling self-conscious. It’s about how a person can still be lonely, even in a crowded city with people bustling all around.

Book Reviews

More than a haunted house

Oozing blood and with many bumps in the night, Harrison artfully blends dread, passion and humor to give her readers a mixture of the Upside Down from “Stranger Things” and a Barbie Dreamhouse of fright.

Book Reviews

Cultural and romantic dilemmas

The food in “Gold Coast Dilemma” takes center stage as a celebration of Ghanaian culture, and as dish after delicious dish is served and described it will make readers’ stomachs rumble. Yet it is the deep and difficult-to-assemble dish of love across cultural divides that makes this book Malone’s best yet.

Book Reviews

More com than rom

Holmes makes wry observations about the undercurrent of sexism in the media. At one point in Cecily’s office five men get together to talk about “supporting women in all the aspects of their lives.” The lack of situational awareness from the men might feel laugh-out-loud familiar.

Book Reviews

Just hot enough to handle

In the last few years there has been so much perimenopause talk, it’s like women are having one extended, collective hot flash. And protagonist and TV executive Lisa Darling is one of those people.

Book Reviews

One upon a time in the Wild West Village

Kirke’s dark humor is on display as she retells stories from her childhood throughout the book. As the youngest daughter of a rock star father, Simon Kirke of Bad Company, and a clothing designer mother, Lorraine, she was transplanted from London to a WestVillage brownstone when she was 5 years old. Yet behind the cool facade, the house was crumbling.

Book Reviews

A most literary romance

So much in life is unpredictable and readers can’t all write their own stories. Picking up a book where the ending is easily anticipated can offer something different, something relaxing. “Not in My Book” gives exactly that — a fun read with a little spice for kicks. 

Book Reviews

Spooky Books for the Spooky Season

Get ready to be haunted by the creepiest new offerings and classics of Halloween-inspired literature. Here are a cauldron’s worth of books that embrace the pumpkin spice of the season and keep you on the chilliest edge of your seat!

Book Reviews

Melissa Petro and the shame-industrial complex

While Petro’s recollections of her own life are certainly captivating, and hearing voices of women from around the country can be gratifying and fulfilling, there is nothing groundbreakingly original or insightful about this book.

Book Reviews

Evan Friss knows your favorite bookshop

“The Bookshop,” Evan Friss’s history of the book retail business, includes the didn’t-see-that-coming tale of Judy, a 3,000-pound elephant who signed books (with a stamp that dangled from her trunk, obviously) at Marshall Field’s booming books department in 1944.

Book Reviews

Jane Austen takes a cruise in updated ‘Dashed’

As in “Sense and Sensibility,” the characters here learn to recognize the importance of reason and communication in relationships. They also learn to know themselves in spite of the “shoulds” fired at them from every direction, from family members to casual acquaintances.

Book Reviews

When 2 engineers get together, sparks fly

Not many romance novels feature introverted women who don’t like being around people and have no need to kowtow to societal niceties. The problem is inherent for the writer: How do you make someone likable if they are hard to get to know?

Book Reviews

Wrangling failing marriages at the divorce ranch

“The Divorcees,” a debut novel from author Rowan Beaird, paints a vivid picture of divorce, set in the landscape of Nevada in the 1950s. The metaphor between the dry, desolate, barren landscape and characters is aptly drawn.

Book Reviews

Magnolia Parks: Into the Dark

Magnolia Parks: Into the Dark” is so packed with unexpected plot twists that reading it is like dashing between cars on an interstate through a hailstorm of cannonballs with a flimsy umbrella as protection.

Cool Summer Beach Reads
Book Reviews

Cool Summer Beach Reads

Fourth of July weekend is the best time to find a good beach towel, a nice grassy area and a big glass of water before settling in with a great read. Here are some old, new and classic titles our InReview contributors recommend!

Book Reviews

Finding her Happy Place

Henry masterfully creates a vivid world with ambiance through her descriptions of the coastal town and its inhabitants. These scenes are emotionally resonant and might remind readers of their own summer vacations.

Our Missing Hearts by Celeste Ng
Book Reviews

For a young Chinese American, our hearts are missing in action

Although the book is classified as dystopian fiction, it is all too real in parts, taking a searing look at hypocrisy and social injustice in the land of the free, especially as it relates to the Asian-American community. The reader might struggle to decide if it’s truly set in the future or if that future is happening now.

Author Eileen Brill
Book Reviews

Reading between the cracks

This skillfully woven book is a study in the butterfly effect. Joan’s daily life is not remarkable but, taken together as a whole, her actions across time are. The book asks the question: Can meaningful connections be made in small moments and, over time, if those connections are broken can they survive in feeling?

News/Features

Recovery and Resilience

This article was originally published on March 11, 2016 in Alabama Alumni Magazine. In those immediate hours of shock, Mayor Walter Maddox remembers one of the first phone calls he…
News/Features

Rejuvenating Retreat

This article was originally published in the winter of 2014 in Lookout Alabama Magazine. DeSoto State Park offers a wide range of lodging options, giving guests of all stripes –…