1. Book Reviews
  2. Books Published November 15, 2002

November 15, 2002

Here are all of the books we've reviewed that were published November 15, 2002. You can also view all of the books we've reviewed that were published anytime in November 2002.

Book Review

Tuxedo Bob

“Any situation in life is better when experienced in formal attire.” This is the first of many statements that Tuxedo Bob has garnered from his father and taken quite literally to heart. Born to a mortician mother and the proprietor... Read More

Book Review

The Old Woman and the Eagle

by Anna Stewart

The sight of an eagle inspires people all over the world. Eagles represent power, grace, and courage. So when an eagle flies into the life of an old woman, readers expect her to be impressed. They don’t expect her to try to change him.... Read More

Book Review

The Christmas Dream

by Pam Kingsbury

According to a recent study of 494 elementary aged children at Brown University, thirty-seven percent of them have problems sleeping. The children felt they were being pushed hard by their parents’ schedules, teachers’ expectations,... Read More

Book Review

Domino

by Leeta Taylor

Welcome to Swinging London, circa 1720. A dyspeptic poet (Alexander Pope, in charming cameo) proves how appearances must indeed govern reality, for women now fit their amoral conduct to follow their dressmakers’ sumptuary, immodest... Read More

Book Review

Sweet Dream Baby

by Paula Scardamalia

“I listen for the songs about secrets and promises,” writes the author in the person of twelve-year-old Travis. This book is full of secrets and promises and the strong flavor of the post-World War II South. Struggling to understand... Read More

Book Review

South of Tradition

by Erik Bledsoe

For too long, the canon of Southern literary studies was almost exclusively white, while scholars examining the African American literary tradition virtually ignored the importance of regional geography. In her previous work,... Read More

Book Review

Inside Television's First War

by Karl Helicher

Like the soldiers who fought, the cameramen and journalists of the NBC News Bureau in Saigon-the video grunts of the war-had to adapt to a new type of guerrilla war to survive. The author was only thirty-one when he was appointed Bureau... Read More

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