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Robin Taylor

Content by Robin Taylor

  • Review

    Issue: July, 1998
    Readers familiar with Robert Hellenga's first novel, The Sixteen Pleasures, will hear its echoes in his second, ruminative book, The Fall of a Sparrow. Read more »
  • Review

    You may know a little about your brain's hemispheres. Maybe you've heard that a right-brained person is more creative, and a left-brained person is good at math. Or is it the other way around? Read more »
  • Review

    You might expect Dominican-American Loida Maritza Perez's remarkable first novel to brim with warm, hazy memories of the homeland (and be cut with the immigrant's shock of immersion in a new cultur Read more »
  • Review

    I am American now, Sagesse LaBasse declares at the opening of Claire Messud's second novel, The Last Life. Readers will be thankful that she doesn't tell her story American style. Read more »
  • Review

    A good memoir can be written about a series of interesting events, but the best memoirs have a unifying theme. Read more »
  • Review

    Meet the older, wiser Douglas Coupland. Read more »
  • Review

    Of course Jon Katz plugs his own book on Amazon.com's Web site. After all, Geeks is about the way the Internet is changing people's lives. Read more »