by Abby Fabiaschi
My father bought me Pillars of the Earth when I was twenty-two. I winced at the thought of the investment; both his and mine—it was a thousand pages long. But Dad was a salesman and did his thing, so I went for it, and Follett became one of my favorite authors. I...
by Abby Fabiaschi
In her latest, THE GOOD LIAR, Catherine McKenzie demonstrates the same strong handle of suspense narratives that readers enjoyed in Fractured and Smoke. The story is told from intertwining perspectives, though the bulk of the pages follow the strong and relatable...
by Abby Fabiaschi
From the publisher: “In 1968, a disillusioned and heartbroken Lillian Carlson left Atlanta after the assassination of Martin Luther King. She found meaning in the hearts of orphaned African children and cobbled together her own small orphanage in the Rift Valley...
by Abby Fabiaschi
“She honestly couldn’t say whether flying made people weird, or whether people were inherently weird and a closed cabin just made it more apparent.” In his latest novel, Chris Bohjalian leverages the sometimes bizarre, sometimes terrifying world of air transit,...
by Abby Fabiaschi
Historical fiction has the capacity to entertain, educate, or horrify. In BEFORE WE WERE YOURS Lisa Wingate manages all three. Through one family’s nightmare, Wingate explores the atrocities that took place at the Tennessee Children’s Home Society between 1920 and1950...