| Marianne Wiggins - Historical fiction - 2003 - 408 pages
This poetic historical novel, set between the world wars, tells the story of an American couple and their adopted son, Lightfoot. | |
| Marianne Wiggins - Fiction - 1999 - 228 pages
Before his thirtieth birthday Holden Garfield has already burned out as a journalist in war-torn Bosnia. Returning to the United States, he hopes the familiar sunshine and ... | |
| Marianne Wiggins - Fiction - 1999 - 228 pages
An earthquake and tidal wave sweep John Dollar, Charlotte, and her pupils into the violent sea. They come to consciousness on the beach huddled around a paralyzed John Dollar. | |
| Marianne Wiggins - Fiction - 1995 - 358 pages
A romance between Noah John, an American foreign correspondent, and Lilith Luciana da Vinci, a glamorous news photographer. They meet in Africa, he moves into her apartment in ... | |
| James Weldon Johnson - Fiction - 1990 - 196 pages
Originally published in 1912, this novel was one of the first to present a frank picture of being black in America Masked in the tradition of the literary confession practiced ... | |
| Colum McCann - Fiction - 2004 - 364 pages
Presents a fictional account of the life of Rudolf Nureyev, following his first ballet lessons under Anna Vasileva, his relationship with the ambitious Yulia, and his ... | |
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