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Ken Follett’s monumental saga of the First World War

Ken Follett’s monumental saga of the First World War

No one is still alive with any adult memory of World War I, which ended a century ago. So when we think of the events that have shaped the world we live in today it's likely World War II looms large. But its antecedent three decades earlier may have had greater long-term...

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Explore My “BEST OF the category” selections

WHAT’S YOUR FAVORITE BOOK?

When people ask me that question, I never know what to say. In a lifetime of reading, I’ve read many thousands of books. And I’ve reviewed well over 2,000 of them on this site. Picking just one as a “favorite,” or even a handful of them, makes no sense to me.

The problem is, I read for many different reasons. Perhaps you do, too. And I read many different sorts of books. Mysteries and thrillers. Popular fiction, especially historical fiction. Science fiction.

And nonfiction, history in particular. You’ll find hundreds of reviews in every one of those categories on this site.

Look to the right for a rotating random selection culled from throughout this site.

Happy reading!

 

Cover image of "The Mistress of Bhatia House," a novel set in India 100 years ago

Fighting crime in Bombay a century ago

Read the first several chapters of Sujata Massey's engrossing fourth entry in her series about the first woman lawyer in Bombay, and you'll get the impression that the book is all about a falling-out between two sisters and the mistreatment of a young woman servant. But don't be fooled. The story...
Transmission is a childish sci-fi novel.

A YA novel about first contact that’s . . . well, childish

Some of the very best science fiction novels I've read have been marketed for young adults. After all, there's nothing inherently wrong with a 13-or 14-year-old protagonist. You know it's unlikely there'll be any smoldering sex scenes or extravagant use of profanity. But otherwise there's no...
Evil Geniuses

How America lost its way and ended up at war with itself

Here is the story of how America lost its way and came to elect a man who rejected democracy itself. For nearly half a century, the broad-based liberal consensus that grew out of the New Deal produced robust economic growth, rich corporate profits, and an expanding middle class enabled by a...
Cover image of "Stormy Weather,"

A hurricane, scam artists, a love story, and a homicidal water buffalo It’s Florida.

Welcome to the wild and wacky world of Carl Hiaasen. If anyone is better qualified to chronicle the madness unfolding in the state of Florida, I can't think of who that might be. Hiaasen portrays the state as wracked by superstorms, shredded by misbegotten and unregulated development, and overrun...
Cover image of "Ice Revelation,"

The thrilling conclusion to a science fiction trilogy

You can generally dismiss any blurb on the cover of a novel as hype. But a quote featured on the Kindle edition of Ice Revelation, the concluding volume of Kevin Tinto's Ice Trilogy, leaps over the top. "A paragon of speculative fiction" boasts someone named Ed Stacker—who turns out to be the...
Cover image of "Fragile," a realistic dystopian novel

A shattering dystopian novel that seems all too real

Welcome to the no-longer-United States of America. Half of Florida lies underwater, and the West Coast is burning and choked with smoke. "Where JFK Airport’s big pool of light used to be, broken terminals and flooded runways" lie hidden in the heat. It's now a permanent evacuation zone, a prime...
Cover image of a book about Typhoid Mary

Love, disease, and self-deception: the life of Typhoid Mary

Estimated reading time: 3 minutes Shortly after the 19th century turned into the 20th, a medical sleuth named George Soper, whom we would today call an epidemiologist, identified a young Irish immigrant cook in New York City as an asymptomatic carrier of the pathogen that causes typhoid fever. Her...
The Gods of Gotham is a thrilling historical novel.

The first cops in old New York star in a thrilling historical novel

It's 1845. The US Congress has approved the annexation of Texas and admitted Florida to statehood. The New York Evening Mirror has just published "The Raven" by Edgar Allen Poe. The Great Famine is raging in Ireland, driving hundreds of thousands of emigrants to US shores. The American...
The End of October is a thriller about a pandemic.

An all-too timely thriller about a pandemic

Lawrence Wright's novel debuted as COVID-19 flared up around the world, so it's no surprise that the book has been marketed as a thriller about a pandemic. It is that, of course, but only in part. More accurately described, The End of October is a story of human folly and the self-destructive...
Cover image of "The Attention Merchants," a novel about pop-up ads and other advertising techniques

The penny press, Amos ‘n Andy, and pop-up ads

If you've been paying attention, you can't have missed the changes in the character of advertising over the course of your life. Certainly, I have. Chances are, you were born in the age of radio, at the earliest. If so, you've witnessed a string of new technologies enter the realm of news and...

My Most Popular Reviews

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Mal Warwick - Book Reviews

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Mal Warwick

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