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Emily, Alone
- A Novel
- Narrated by: Andrea Gallo
- Length: 10 hrs and 15 mins
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Publisher's Summary
A sequel to the best-selling, much-beloved Wish You Were Here, Stewart O'Nan's intimate new novel follows Emily Maxwell, a widow whose grown children have long moved away. She dreams of vists by her grandchildren while mourning the turnover of her quiet Pittsburgh neighborhood, but when her sole companion and sister-in-law Arlene faints at their favorite breakfast buffet, Emily's days change. As she grapples with her new independence, she discovers a hidden strength and realizes that life always offers new possibilities. Like most older women, Emily is a familiar yet invisible figure, one rarely portrayed so honestly. Her mingled feelings-of pride and regret, joy and sorrow- are gracefully rendered in wholly unexpected ways.
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Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Performance
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- John S.
- 07-23-12
Examination of a mundane existence
Having found O'Nan's "Snow Angels" a bit grim, but well-written, and" Last Night at the Lobster" equally well-written, and not nearly as sad as I'd feared, I spent a credit on this book ... which is very well-written, and not at all grim. Like "Lobster", it's character-driven; however, in a full-length novel (the other was a novella) that's tougher to pull off. Listening to the audio may have contributed as the short chapters (more or less) ran together, whereas a print book would've seemed less daunting (for lack of a better term).
Having lived a roughly parallel life to Emily's kids, I can vouch that O'Nan completely nailed the character aspect, although the isolation of Emily (and her sister-in-law) seemed a bit overdone to me. It may seem incongruous, but it is accurate that someone who buys a new car in cash would make a point of remembering to bring a restaurant coupon for a couple of bucks off.
There's almost no tension in the novel, except for a bit between Emily and her daughter, and daughter-in-law; the latter almost entirely "off screen" filtered from Emily's point-of-view, leading to me wonder whether that had been covered already in the previous book "Wish You Were Here". Instead, those chapters consist of Emily's reactions to various situations: new neighbors taking the place of the last other "old guard" resident (my folks were about the last to go in their neighborhood after 35 years), Election Day (she votes for McCain, unenthusiastically), etc. One vignette has her attending the funeral of an old friend, who's survived by a same sex partner - Emily is pleased to note that the woman's (biological) family accords her "widow" status. Later, she expresses disappointment that she hasn't gotten to meet her granddaughter's partner (they live in Boston). Demographically, seniors may be the strongest group opposed to gays, but O'Nan has made it clear that educated WASP's are an exception. One episode I didn't care for was Emily's refusal to try a product recommended by her cleaning lady for dealing with car scratches, with its class-conscious dismissal; instead she moans about paying $500 to the dealership. She also sneers at the woman's "Butler" accent.
The lack of action is at least partially compensated for by the author's sense of place. I've never been to Pittsburgh, but came away seeing the area clearly - and I'm not that "visual" a reader. Granted, he does get carried away at times: it wasn't really necessary to go through all the choices on the salad bar at the (coupon) restaurant in an early episode.
So - would I recommend the book? Yes, if one bears in mind that each chapter is a small part of a larger whole, that doesn't really contain a traditional story arc. If you're new to O'Nan, however, I'd go with Lobster first.
Audio narration itself was overall good, although at times it seemed even Ms. Gallo was overcome by the task of maintaining interest in quite mundane matters.
5 people found this helpful
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- "unknown"
- 09-25-11
the most boring book I ever listened to
This book wasn’t for you, but who do you think might enjoy it more?
someone with no window to look out of
What reaction did this book spark in you? Anger, sadness, disappointment?
disappointment
Any additional comments?
I kept listening all the way to end, thinking it just had to get better. It never did.
4 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Teresa
- 05-17-11
Wonderful book - insight into aging
Loved this book. A sensitive insight into the life of an aging woman. O'Nan doesn't pull any punches, but listening, I had the impression he really cared about Emily.
3 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Margaret
- 05-13-11
The Invisible Woman
I loved this novel for its rare protagonist, the invisible woman. This story is about what at least 50% of us will become at some time in the future; an elderly woman. Emily is adaptable to the changes occurring in her life, and makes the best of them. Nothing earthshaking happens, just like in real life. The tedium and the risks, of her life are given equal time. Many pages are devoted to one sided conversations between Emily and Rufus her aging springer spaniel...... thankfully the dog does not die, he soldiers on just like Emily.
3 people found this helpful
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- Mary
- 08-06-12
Lots of insights and truths about aging
What did you love best about Emily, Alone?
I identified with Emily, for better or worse, because I am getting up there myself. It seemed an accurate description of life at the end.
What did you like best about this story?
The insights
Did you have an extreme reaction to this book? Did it make you laugh or cry?
There were times when it made me angry because she was a good person, but forgotten by most people. It was true to life as you get old.
Any additional comments?
I don't know if younger readers would get it, or care, but anyone approaching or living in old age would be pleased to read about an everyday woman at this stage of life who is not boring or feeling sorry for herself but speaking the truth.
2 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Kathleen McDonald
- 06-07-11
Emily is an admirable woman
This story about a time in the life of an eighty year old woman is so real that one wonders how a young man could have written it. The cares and concerns of this demographic are right on target - carrying on after the death of the husband, worrying about the ability to drive his big boat of a car, needing yet chafing under the somewhat clawing friendship of a female contemporary, coming to grips with her flawed children who will never be all she had hoped and recognizing the deterioration of her formerly capable body. This was a moving and enjoyable book. I know lots of women like Emily, women who continue to be productive well into their nineties and beyond. They are my heros and Emily is right up there among them.
2 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Carolyn
- 05-23-11
I've Met Her
It is difficult to imagine how a male author could capture the persona of a woman near her ninith year.
A widow, Emily faces the end days with practical courage. O'Nan paints her world with a balanced brush. You see her come to understand how her sometimes strained relationships with her children are not that much different than hers with her mother. Emily's health is remarkable; she has a comfortable living allowing her to keep the self reliance that has supported her since the death of her beloved husband. No whine and moan for Emily, she soldiers on determined to make the best of each day. The narrator is perfect for the part. This is not a book for someone looking for adventure or drama. However, if like me, you are a woman of a certain age looking for a gentle read about someone you might just know, this is the book for you. I found it a book with a lot of food for thought about my own life.
2 people found this helpful
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- L G Spicher
- 09-15-19
Kept waiting for this book to begin.
A book about nothing that never got good.
I wish I count get my money back.
1 person found this helpful
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- daughter1216
- 06-11-19
Tedious
This was particularly painful to me to listen to. I really don't need to hear how they split a sandwich, couldn't eat it all, then wrapped the rest to take home for later. Really?! Obviously many readers enjoyed this, but this one is not for me.
1 person found this helpful
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- S. Honeycutt
- 05-17-23
I wanted to love it
I listened to Henry, Himself just before this one so I had high hopes because I liked that one so much. This was just tedious. Boring, boring, boring. And the narration did nothing to help it, tho she had little to work with in the story. Super disappointed.
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Performance
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Story
It was the summer of her Chevette, of J.P. and letting her hair grow. It was also the summer when, without warning, popular high school student Kim Larsen disappeared from her small midwestern town. Her loving parents, her introverted sister, her friends and boyfriend must now do everything they can to find her. As desperate search parties give way to pleading television appearances, and private investigations yield to personal revelations, we see one town's intimate struggle to maintain hope.
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Long...Drawn Out and Boring!
- By Terri L on 03-03-09
By: Stewart O'Nan
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Henry, Himself
- A Novel
- By: Stewart O'Nan
- Narrated by: Richmond Hoxie
- Length: 11 hrs and 59 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
A member of the greatest generation looks back on the loves and losses of his past and comes to treasure the present anew in this poignant and thoughtful new novel from a modern master.
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Grew On Me With Time & Became A Favorite
- By Sara on 01-17-20
By: Stewart O'Nan
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Last Night at the Lobster
- By: Stewart O'Nan
- Narrated by: Jonathan Davis
- Length: 3 hrs and 50 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Perched in the far corner of a run-down New England mall, the Red Lobster hasn't been making its numbers, and headquarters has pulled the plug. But manager Manny DeLeon still needs to navigate a tricky last shift. With only four shopping days left until Christmas, Manny must convince his near-mutinous staff to hunker down and serve the final onslaught of hungry retirees, lunatics, and holiday office parties.
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Very good novella
- By Richard on 12-08-10
By: Stewart O'Nan
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Ocean State
- By: Stewart O'Nan
- Narrated by: Sara Young
- Length: 5 hrs and 45 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
In the first line of Ocean State, we learn that a high school student was murdered, and we find out who did it. The story that unfolds from there with incredible momentum is thus one of the buildup to and fallout from the murder, told through the alternating perspectives of the four women at its heart. The murderer Angel, her mother Carol, and the victim Birdy, all come alive on the page as they converge in a climax both tragic and inevitable. Watching over it all is the retrospective testimony of Angel’s younger sister, Marie.
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I Am Mad
- By K. Maxwell on 03-18-22
By: Stewart O'Nan
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West of Sunset
- A Novel
- By: Stewart O'Nan
- Narrated by: Christopher Lane
- Length: 10 hrs and 59 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
In 1937 F. Scott Fitzgerald was a troubled, uncertain man whose literary success was long over. In poor health, with his wife consigned to a mental asylum and his finances in ruins, he struggled to make a new start as a screenwriter in Hollywood. By December of 1940, he would be dead of a heart attack. Those last three years of Fitzgerald's life, often obscured by the legend of his earlier Jazz Age glamour, are the focus of Stewart O'Nan's gorgeously and gracefully written novel.
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An engrossing listen
- By Melvyn Kirtley on 02-05-15
By: Stewart O'Nan
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This Is Your Life, Harriet Chance
- By: Jonathan Evison
- Narrated by: Susan Boyce
- Length: 6 hrs and 45 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
With her husband Bernard two years in the grave, seventy-nine-year-old Harriet Chance sets sail on an ill-conceived Alaskan cruise only to discover through a series of revelations that she's been living the past sixty years of her life under entirely false pretenses. There, amid the buffets and lounge singers, between the imagined appearance of her late husband and the very real arrival of her estranged daughter midway through the cruise, Harriet is forced to take a long look back, confronting the truth about pivotal events that changed the course of her life.
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Why I Didn't Like This Story
- By Kathy in CA on 10-02-15
By: Jonathan Evison
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Songs for the Missing
- A Novel
- By: Stewart O'Nan
- Narrated by: Emily Janice Card
- Length: 9 hrs and 59 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
It was the summer of her Chevette, of J.P. and letting her hair grow. It was also the summer when, without warning, popular high school student Kim Larsen disappeared from her small midwestern town. Her loving parents, her introverted sister, her friends and boyfriend must now do everything they can to find her. As desperate search parties give way to pleading television appearances, and private investigations yield to personal revelations, we see one town's intimate struggle to maintain hope.
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Long...Drawn Out and Boring!
- By Terri L on 03-03-09
By: Stewart O'Nan
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The Stone Diaries
- By: Carol Shields, Penelope Lively - introduction
- Narrated by: Deborah Drakeford
- Length: 12 hrs and 55 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Born in 1905, Daisy Goodwill drifts through the chapters of childhood, marriage, widowhood, remarriage, motherhood, and old age. Bewildered by her inability to understand her own role, Daisy attempts to find a way to tell her own story within a novel that is itself about the limitations of autobiography.
By: Carol Shields, and others
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Snow Angels
- By: Stewart O'Nan
- Narrated by: Malcolm Hillgartner
- Length: 5 hrs and 43 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Arthur Parkinson is 14 during the dreary winter of 1974, experiencing the confusing pangs of adolescence and the pain of his parents' divorce. His world is shattered further by the sudden and violent death of Annie Marchand, his beloved former babysitter.
By: Stewart O'Nan
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The Slaughterman's Daughter
- A Novel
- By: Yaniv Iczkovits
- Narrated by: Tovah Feldshuh
- Length: 17 hrs and 53 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
With her reputation as a vilde chaya (wild animal), Fanny Keismann isn’t like the other women in her shtetl in the Pale of Settlement - certainly not her obedient and anxiety-ridden sister, Mende, whose “philosopher” of a husband has run off to Minsk, abandoning her and their two children. As a young girl, Fanny felt an inexorable pull toward her father’s profession of ritual slaughterer and, under his reluctant guidance, became a master with a knife. And though she long ago gave up that unsuitable profession, Fanny still keeps the knife tied to her right leg.
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The narration - why?????
- By agarista on 07-20-21
By: Yaniv Iczkovits
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Exile Music
- A Novel
- By: Jennifer Steil
- Narrated by: Hillary Huber
- Length: 14 hrs and 46 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
As a young girl growing up in Vienna in the 1930s, Orly has an idyllic childhood filled with music. Her father plays the viola in the Philharmonic, her mother is a well-regarded opera singer, her beloved and charismatic older brother holds the neighborhood in his thrall, and most of her eccentric and wonderful extended family live nearby. Only vaguely aware of Hitler's rise or how her Jewish heritage will define her family's identity, Orly spends her days immersed in play with her best friend and upstairs neighbor, Anneliese.
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Superb!
- By Judi Forman on 09-14-20
By: Jennifer Steil
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The Gilded Hour
- By: Sara Donati
- Narrated by: Cassandra Campbell
- Length: 31 hrs and 33 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
The year is 1883, and in New York City it's a time of dizzying splendor, crushing poverty, and tremendous change. With the gravity-defying Brooklyn Bridge nearly complete and New York in the grips of antivice crusader Anthony Comstock, Anna Savard and her cousin, Sophie - both graduates of the Woman's Medical School - treat the city's most vulnerable, even if doing so may put everything they've strived for in jeopardy.
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Historical romance, surgical implements too!
- By Annie M. on 09-06-15
By: Sara Donati
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Copperhead
- A Novel
- By: Alexi Zentner
- Narrated by: Kirby Heyborne
- Length: 11 hrs and 54 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Jessup's stepfather gave him almost everything good in his life - a sober mother, a sister, a sense of home, and the game of football. But during the years that David John spent in prison for his part in a brutal hate crime, Jessup came to realize that his stepfather is also a source of lethal poison for his family. Now it's Jessup's senior year, and all he wants to do is lay low until he can accept one of the football scholarships that will be his ticket out of town.
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Thought provoking
- By Erica R on 01-11-23
By: Alexi Zentner
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A Face in the Crowd
- By: Stephen King, Stewart O'Nan
- Narrated by: Craig Wasson
- Length: 1 hr and 19 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Dean Evers, an elderly widower, sits in front of the television with nothing better to do than waste his leftover evenings watching baseball. It’s Rays/Mariners, and David Price is breezing through the line-up. Suddenly, in a seat a few rows up beyond the batter, Evers sees the face of someone from decades past, someone who shouldn’t be at the ballgame, shouldn’t be on the planet. And so begins a parade of people from Evers’s past, all of them occupying that seat behind home plate. Until one day Dean Evers sees someone even eerier….
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Perfect Match
- By Tim on 10-04-12
By: Stephen King, and others
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The Two Lives of Lydia Bird
- A Novel
- By: Josie Silver
- Narrated by: Olivia Vinall
- Length: 11 hrs and 51 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Lydia and Freddie. Freddie and Lydia. They’d been together for more than a decade and Lydia thought their love was indestructible. But she was wrong. On Lydia’s 28th birthday, Freddie died in a car accident. So now it’s just Lydia, and all she wants is to hide indoors and sob until her eyes fall out. But Lydia knows that Freddie would want her to try to live fully, happily, even without him. So, enlisting the help of his best friend, Jonah, and her sister, Elle, she takes her first tentative steps into the world, open to life - and perhaps even love - again.
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Depressing
- By P. Levell-Ireland on 04-15-20
By: Josie Silver
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The Parisian
- By: Isabella Hammad
- Narrated by: Fiona Button
- Length: 20 hrs and 18 mins
- Unabridged
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A masterful debut novel by Plimpton Prize winner Isabella Hammad, The Parisian illuminates a pivotal period of Palestinian history through the journey and romances of one young man, from his studies in France during World War I to his return to Palestine at the dawn of its battle for independence.
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Overly ambitious
- By Turtle on 06-16-19
By: Isabella Hammad