Friday, May 3, 2013

Week 2: Appeal Factors

The Ashford Affair by Lauren Willig
Lauren Willig’s new stand-alone novel The Ashford Affair is a departure from her well-known Pink Carnation series. The story, which the Library Journal says combines an “Out of Africa sensibility with a Downton Abbey cast,” takes readers from the English countryside before World War I to 1920s Kenya and 1990s New York City. The Ashford Affair is a character-driven, multi-layered love story that will enchant fans of Kate Morton.
 



Reconstructing Amelia by Kimberly McCreight
Kate Baron, a single mom and busy attorney, is devastated when her daughter Amelia dies in an apparent suicide. Weeks later, as Kate returns to work, she receives an anonymous text message that stops her in her tracks. “She didn't jump.” Slowly, Kate begins to uncover the truth about the last months of Amelia’s life. Through text messages, emails, and social media posts, Kate unearths the secrets that Amelia kept. This character-driven story is both suspenseful and heartbreaking as Kate learns the reality of Amelia’s world and the truth about how she died. Reconstructing Amelia will appeal to readers who enjoy Jodi Picoult’s novels or William Landay’s recent bestseller Defending Jacob. Reconstructing Amelia’s emotional depth and exploration of current social issues make this a great pick for your next book club discussion.

I made suggestions on Sandy L. and Jo B.'s annotations.

1 comment:

  1. Hi Beth- Based on your 1st annotation, I would suggest The Sandcastle Girls by Chris Bohjalian (2012).It is a character-driven novel told through parallel stories of a woman who falls in love with an Armenian soldier during the Armenian Genocide and a modern-day New Yorker prompted to rediscover her Armenian past.

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