Book Review: Plot is surprisingly vacant in J.K. Rowling's The Casual Vacancy

With her first adult novel The Casual Vacancy, it’s clear that J.K. Rowling is trying – perhaps too hard – to distance herself from the boy wizard that made her famous.

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Book Review: Steve Jobs biography provides fascinating insight into legendary Apple CEO

Walter Isaacson's book Steve Jobs chronicles the life of the recently deceased former CEO of Apple Inc. Jobs' impact on the music, phone, computer and tablet industries is best described as ubiquitous. The plethora of iPhones, iPods, iPads and MacBooks on campus would not exist without Jobs.

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Book Review: Tina Fey exudes charm, comedy throughout Bossypants

Since she started sitting behind the famed desk of the Weekend Update on "Saturday Night Live," Tina Fey has been a household name. She became the first female head writer at "SNL," and her sitcom "30 Rock" has won numerous Emmys.

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Book Review: Fairytale collection not without a few bad apples

The recently released anthology, My Mother She Killed Me, My Father He Ate Me, has a title that sounds like it was ripped from the pages of a Brothers Grimm tale.

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Book Review: The Clockwork Angel is a masterpiece of steampunk fantasy

Steampunk, magic, mystery and love combine in Cassandra Clare's latest novel The Clockwork Angel, a masterpiece of period writing and fantasy realism with stunning imagery and unforgettable characters.

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Book Review: Bret Easton Ellis revisits roots with Imperial Bedrooms

Bret Easton Ellis' seventh novel, Imperial Bedrooms, was released on June 15 as a sequel to his 1985 debut novel, Less Than Zero, picks up with the same characters 25 years later.

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Book Review: Hornby strips down characters in latest comedic novel

Nick Hornby, the popular author of High Fidelity and About a Boy (among others) has nailed it again with Juliet, Naked, a slow-paced comedy revolving around a love of music.

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Book Review: Upcoming adaptation starts as exciting story

David Grann, staff writer for The New Yorker, begins by describing himself as a "disinterested reporter" who is able to avoid personal involvement in his stories. Two pages later, however, he reveals his true position: lost in the Amazon without a guide, food or water, questioning how he ended up there.

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Book Review: Horses an inspirational story

Jeannette Walls simultaneously amazed and horrified readers with her best-selling memoir The Glass Castle, and although her newest "true-life novel" - Half Broke Horses - is not as gripping, it is a satisfying prequel to the Casey-Walls legacy.

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Book Review: Kingsolver novel ponders idea of societal lacuna

A lacuna, a missing part, is exactly what bestselling author Barbara Kingsolver creates with in her newest novel, The Lacuna. Beautifully written, Kingsolver paints an image of life without a history, living with gaps.

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Book Review: Best-selling author delivers again

Once again, Audrey Niffenegger, bestselling author of The Time Traveler's Wife, displays her uncanny ability to create a plausible plot with an undeniably paranormal conflict.

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Book Review: Brown's Lost Symbol falls short of revelation

Although Dan Brown's highly anticipated sequel to The Da Vinci Code, entitled The Lost Symbol, has a relatively captivating storyline, Brown's writing seems to have taken a dive.

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Book Review: Benioff puts new spin on old tale

David Benioff, the successful author of three books, two of which have been adapted into films, has incorporated his screenwriting career into his latest novel, "City of Thieves."

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Book Review: "Paper Towns" a literary delight

Rarely does a so-called "young adult" novel appeal to readers of all ages, but John Green's "Paper Towns," accomplishes this feat through its intricate development of characters, intelligent wit and fast-moving plot.Green calls upon his inner nerd to create protagonist Quentin Jacobsen.

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Book Review: Klosterman's attempt at fiction falls short of previous successes

Popular author Chuck Klosterman's long-awaited fifth book, a novel entitled "Downtown Owl," was released in September, much to the gratification of his fans.

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Book Review: Gripping novel The Book Thief well worth its worldwide praise

On its surface, Markus Zusak's bestselling novel The Book Thief is yet another evocative portrayal of life in Nazi Germany during the Holocaust and World War II. To dismiss it as such, however, would be a crime against literature, or perhaps even language itself.

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Book Review: People of the Book a dissection of history, mystery

Most of the people who read this review also live and work within the halls of a university, a place of knowledge and learning, of seeking information and of developing the wisdom to use that information properly. Pulitzer Prize-winner Geraldine Brook's novel, People of the Book, is in many ways a university in clothbound form; a treasure house of information spun within the context of an incredibly well-crafted and intricately beautiful tale of mystery, intrigue and, above all else, how the past can shape our perceptions of the present.

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