Oprah Picks
Oprah has done some amazing
things over the last several years in her many faceted career, and certainly one of them
is to bring wonderful new writers to the attention of the American public.
We'd like to share a few of
those author's with you too based on Oprah's picks..

Where the Heart
Is
by Billie Letts
Reviews
Amazon.com
"A funny thing happens to Novalee Nation on her way to Bakersfield, California.
Her ne'er-do-well boyfriend, Willie Jack Pickens, abandons her in an Oklahoma Wal-Mart and
takes off on his own, leaving her with just 10 dollars and the clothes on her back. Not
that hard luck is anything new to Novalee, who is "seventeen, seven months pregnant,
thirty-seven pounds overweight--and superstitious about sevens.... For most people, sevens
were lucky. But not for her," Billie Letts writes. 'She'd had a bad history with
them, starting with her seventh birthday, the day Momma Nell ran away with a baseball
umpire named Fred...' "
Read more about
the most recent addition to Oprah's Book Club or Buy the book now
Midwives: A Novel
Chris Bohjalian
In Midwives, Chris Bohjalian
chronicles the events leading up to the trial of Sibyl Danforth, a respected midwife in
the small Vermont town of Reddington, on charges of manslaughter. It quickly becomes
evident, however, that Sibyl is
not the only one on trial--the prosecuting attorney and the state's medical community are
all anxious to use this tragedy as ammunition against midwifery in general; this
particular midwife, after all, an ex-hippie who still evokes the best of the flower-power
generation, is something of an anachronism in 1981. Through it all, Sibyl, her husband,
Rand, and their teenage daughter, Connie, attempt to keep their family intact, but the
stress of the trial--and Sibyl's growing closeness to her lawyer--puts pressure on both
marriage and family. Bohjalian takes readers through the intricacies of childbirth and the
law, and by the end of Sibyl Danforth's trial, it's difficult to decide which was more
harrowing--the tragic delivery or its legal aftermath.
What Looks Like
Crazy on an Ordinary Day
Pearl Cleage
In a remarkable debut novel that
sizzles with sensuality, crackles with life-affirming energy and moves the reader to
laughter and tears, author Pearl Cleage creates a world rich in character, human drama,
and deep, compassionate understanding. After a decade of luxe living in Atlanta, Ava
Johnson has returned to tiny Idlewild, Michigan--her fabulous career and power plans
smashed to bits on one dark truth: Ava has tested positive for HIV. Bur rather than a sorrowful end, her
homecoming is a new beginning. Because, in the ten-plus years since she left, all the
problems of the big city have invaded the sleepy community of her childhood. Because dear
friends and family sorely need her help in the face of impending trouble and tragedy, and
Ava cannot turn her back on them. And because, most importantly, Ava Johnson is
inexplicably and undeniably falling in love.
I Know This
Much Is True
Wally Lamb
What if you were a 40-year-old housepainter,
horrifically abused, emotionally unavailable, and your identical twin was a paranoid
schizophrenic who believed in public self-mutilation? You'd either be a guest on the Jerry Springer Show or
Dominick Birdsey, the antihero, narrator, and bad-juju magnet of I Know This Much Is
True. Somewhere in the recesses of this hefty 912-page tome lurks an honest, moving
account of one man's search, denial, and acceptance of self. This is no easy feat
considering his grandfather seemed to take parenting tips from the SS and his grandmother
was a possible teenage murderess, his stepfather a latent sadist, and his brother, Thomas,
a politically motivated psychopath. Not one to break with tradition, Dominick continues
the dysfunctional legacy with rape, a failed marriage, a nervous breakdown, SIDS, a car
crash, and a racist conspiracy against a coworker--just to name a few.
A stretch, both literally and figuratively from his
Oprah-christened bestseller, She's Come Undone, Lamb's book ventures outside the
confines of the tightly bound beach read and marathons through a detailed, neatly
cataloged account of every familial travesty and personal failure one can endure. At its
heart lies Freud's "return of the repressed": the more we try to deny who we
are, the more we become what we fear. Lamb takes Freud's psychological abstraction to the
realm of everyday living, packing his novel with tender, believable dialogue and
thoughtful observation. --Rebekah Warren
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