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Rosalind Fournier

Content by Rosalind Fournier

  • A Southern family's fading fortunes

    <B>A Southern family's fading fortunes</B> Regina Angela Riant, the heroine of Helen Scully's first novel, <B>In the Hope of Rising Again</B>, is the fifth child and only da Read more »
  • A sweet circle of friends

    On the surface, the members of the facetiously named "Same Sweet Girls" club six women, now in their 40s, who've known one another since college and still get together twice a year seem like unlikely Read more »
  • Review

    Issue: June, 1998
    The first novel by popular essayist Bailey White, Quite a Year for Plums offers an intimate, gossipy, and occasionally irreverent glimpse into the friendship of a group of eccentrics in a small town i Read more »
  • Review

    Issue: July, 1998
    Kaye Gibbons weaves marvelous prose from the emotional havoc hateful fathers stir in their daughters. Read more »
  • Review

    Issue: May, 1999
    In the 21 years they've been husband and wife, Dennis and Vicki Covington have been through plenty alcoholism, depression, infertility. You could say theirs has not been a storybook marriage. Read more »
  • Review

    In the summer of 1970, Thomas Mann Jr. (no relation to the writer of the same name) finds an infant in a basket on his front porch, with a note that reads: Eddie's bastard. Read more »
  • Through the eyes of a child

    Consider yourself warned. Me ∧ Emma, the second novel by former Time and People writer Elizabeth Flock, is a tour de force in the telling. But it can be painful to read. Read more »