Posts in review
Review: History by Elsa Morante & A Woman in Berlin: Eight Weeks in a Conquered City by Anonymous

The book that I looked forward to the most from my TBR stack was History by Elsa Morante, and the novel that surprised me the most was A Woman in Berlin: Eight Weeks in a Conquered City by Anonymous. After reading both of these novels back to back, I could not stop my brain from making connections between the two stories and their subject matter.

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Review: The World That Was Ours by Hilda Bernstein

In 1963, Rusty Berstein, Nelson Mandela, and fifteen other heads of the African National Congress (ANC) were arrested and charged with over 220 acts of sabotage with the goal of a “violent revolution.” The World That Was Ours details Hilda’s experiences, as well as her husbands and the other leaders of the ANC, leading up to the “Rivonia Trial,” which would determine the fate of the activists.

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Review: The Far Cry by Emma Smith

The Far Cry tells the story of a father and daughter who move from London to India in the mid-1940s. Thanks to Smith’s personal experiences, the novel is filled with beautiful and realistic descriptions of the journey from England to India and the environment Smith found when she stepped off the boat. There is also a light sprinkling of feminist ideas throughout.

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Review: Les Quatre Filles du Docteur Marsch by Louisa May Alcott, translation by P.J. Stahl

Little Women by Louisa May Alcott was one of my favorite books that I read when I was a child. I picked up this 1923 French translation by P.J. Stahl at one of those free libraries that seem to be popping up everywhere. As I started to read this 1923 French version of the story, I was immediately taken back to the first time I read it.

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Mini review: Sabrina & Corina by Kali Fajardo-Anstine

The book selected for November for the meeting at Paper Boat Booksellers is Sabrina & Corina by Kali Fajardo-Anstine. The theme for the meeting at this location is feminism in France and the United States. Books selected for this theme can vary from just focusing on feminism in that particular country or an author who has a relationship with both of them. I choose this book because it is a collection of short stories about Mexican women in the Southwest region of the United States.

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