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Nov 8, 2024 |
yorkshiretimes.co.uk | Min Jin Lee |Lisa Jewell |Michael Magee |Gabrielle Zevin
artsReviewWherever I lay my hat, that’s my home is a favourite song of mine by Paul Young. I remember driving up the motorway, en route to visit family in Scotland, when we saw in the distance, the high-rise flats of Glasgow. “Not pretty,” I said, and the voice beside me replied, knowingly, “Maybe but each flat is someone’s home.” House, flat or bungalow, mansion, castle or palace, it’s home to someone and home is a word with a special meaning.
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Oct 25, 2024 |
yorkshiretimes.co.uk | Lisa Jewell |Michael Magee |Gabrielle Zevin |Diane Allen
artsHow well do we really know our neighbours, no matter how close they live? Or our friends, or even our family, especially when those people know how to project a perfectly acceptable image of themselves, whether or not it is true? How easy is it for suspicion to poison the mind and, warranted or not, a relationship?
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Oct 11, 2024 |
yorkshiretimes.co.uk | Michael Magee |Gabrielle Zevin |Diane Allen |Gay Marris
artsThe history of Northern Ireland has long interested me. My mother was born in Belfast and we still have family living in the province. History lessons at both O and A level covered the topic and Seamus Heaney’s poetry, reflecting as it does on his life in rural Northern Ireland, seems to have regularly invaded my Lit. studies.
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Sep 9, 2024 |
artnews.com | Francesca Aton |Gabrielle Zevin
Glenn Kaino is the cocurator of “Breath(e): Toward Climate and Social Justice,” an exhibition at the Hammer Museum that is part of “PST ART: Art & Science Collide” in Los Angeles. Below, he discusses conservation and artistic production, along with related interests.
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Aug 5, 2024 |
bookandfilmglobe.com | Gabrielle Zevin |Sharyn Vane
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Jul 3, 2024 |
calgaryherald.com | Gabrielle Zevin |Michael Finkel |Chris W Whitaker |Ichiro Kishimi
Skip to ContentAdvertisement 1 • • You can save this article by registering for free here. Or sign-in if you have an account. Reviews and recommendations are unbiased and products are independently selected. Postmedia may earn an affiliate commission from purchases made through links on this page. Article contentNEW RELEASESWe apologize, but this video has failed to load. Try refreshing your browser, ortap here to see other videos from our team. 1.
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Jul 1, 2024 |
barnesandnoble.com | Isabelle McConville |Colin Walsh |L. Lam |Gabrielle Zevin
While you’re off catching flights and booking holiday weekend barbecues, beat the heat with our brand-new monthly picks. July’s take us to Ireland’s west coast in our thriller pick, over to rural Pakistan in our young reader selection, and we get to travel to a world of dragons in our speculative title. Pack your favorite blanket and snacks for these reads — there’s so much to see. Please enable javascript to add items to the cart. Please enable javascript to add items to the cart.
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Jun 30, 2024 |
barnesandnoble.com | Gabrielle Zevin |Isabelle McConville
What Came Before: A Guest Post by Gabrielle Zevin It’s been two years since the initial release of Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin — two years of immersing ourselves in this world of friendship and love, a journey through heartbreak and grief. Gabrielle has penned an exclusive B&N Reads essay reflecting on her career and what this story means to her, down below.
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May 10, 2024 |
sonderbooks.com | Gabrielle Zevin
Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin read by Jennifer Kim and Julian Cihi Review posted May 10, 2024. Random House Audio, 2022. 13 hours and 52 minutes. Review written May 3, 2024, from a library eaudiobook. Starred Review I'm behind everybody else on reading novels for adults, but not being on an award committee right now, I'm trying to catch up on some of the titles that are popular at Fairfax County Public Library.
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Apr 6, 2024 |
theguardian.com | Gabrielle Zevin
Pity the writer who believes they have written the next Cloud Atlas! A literary agent once told me that when a fledgling writer compares their novel to David Mitchell’s, he invariably knows it will be awful. Once you have written a book like Cloud Atlas, you have not written Cloud Atlas because Cloud Atlas is not like anything. When the novel was published in 2004, critics compared it to everything.