READ HER LIKE AN OPEN BOOK

Celebrating literary fiction by women

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Author: Bill Wolfe

Editor, book blogger, and photographer. High school English teacher and ex-lawyer. Interests include music, literature, and football; travel; portrait and landscape photography; politics; Dodgers baseball; social justice; and learning Spanish.
April 22, 2024April 22, 2024 Bill Wolfe

Climate Change, Eco-Grief, and the Power of Story: Maryann Lesert on the inspiration for her novel LAND MARKS

April 19, 2024April 19, 2024 Bill Wolfe

WHALE FALL is an absorbing, lyrical coming of age story set on an isolated Welsh island

April 15, 2024April 15, 2024 Bill Wolfe

THE CEMETERY OF UNTOLD STORIES is a bittersweet celebration of the lives of characters whose stories must be told and the Dominican immigrant experience

April 2, 2024April 2, 2024 Bill Wolfe

Laura McBride on “occupying the special zone of women’s bodies”

April 1, 2024April 4, 2024 Bill Wolfe

April 1 means it’s time for my favorite first quarter reads

March 28, 2024March 28, 2024 Bill Wolfe

Rene Denfeld: Writing the Truth About Criminals

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Top Posts

  • Guest Blogger Robin Black: On Learning To Spell Women’s Names While Men Buy My New Book For Their Wives
  • Wendy J. Fox: Reconciling book sales as a debut author
  • Literary Giveaway Blog Hop!
  • Twelve Australian writers you should know
  • THE BERRY PICKERS explores the lengths people will go to for family in a story set against North America's dark history of anti-Indigenous racism
  • Emilia Bassano Lanyer: Was she the Dark Lady of Shakespeare's sonnets?
  • Susanna Clarke returns at last with PIRANESI, a mind-expanding reading experience
  • THE WIND KNOWS MY NAME stuffs too many stories into too few pages, resulting in a superficial and cliched novel
  • FRIENDS AND DARK SHAPES is an absorbing exploration of young people finding their way in a rapidly changing personal and physical landscape
  • PEACH BLOSSOM SPRING an absorbing family drama of war, migration, and heritage -- and the power of stories to heal

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Read Her Like an Open Book

Read Her Like an Open Book
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