Books
| A Cold Whisper of Evil by Faye Jones Former Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist John Sandford knows his way around a memorable description. But it’s his characters that stay with the reader. |
| Catchy, Even if It Doesn’t Rhyme by Maria Browning These stories mostly stick to well-worn themes of family drama and love gone wrong, with occasional forays into white trash looniness and the trials of the music business. |
From the Archives
The Price of Dissentby Maria Browning
Locked Up is a memoir of Don Beisswenger's time in jail as well as a statement of faith by a self-described “post-Holocaust Christian."
(May 01, 2008)
On Truth, Nutburgers and the American Way
by Paul V. Griffith
in America, where diversity is supposed to be a given, how is it that the hamburger, a cultural mongrel, reigns supreme?
(May 01, 2008)
Ditching the Debs
by Fernanda Moore
Katie Crouch, a South Carolina native, apparently knows all about the archaic and vaguely ridiculous social mores of Charleston society.
(Apr 24, 2008)
Consummate Love Unconsummated
by Liz Garrigan
We all know a Peter Russell—the solid, relatively successful guy with moderate good looks but no particular star quality. The pleasant but forgettable fellow at the wedding reception awkwardly wearing rented shoes.
(Apr 24, 2008)
Hoping to Find a Friend and a Lover?
by Lacey Galbraith
J.M. Kearns has a Ph.D. in philosophy, but his approach to romance is simple: To find Mr. Right, you first have to look for Mr. Right.
(Apr 17, 2008)
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