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American - Native American
| A Century of Masters9781890689438 | How We Became Human: New and Selected Poems: 1975-20019780393051018 | Native America: Arts, Traditions, and Celebrations9780517574362 |
| A Century of Masters9781890689438 | How We Became Human: New and Selected Poems: 1975-20019780393051018 | Native America: Arts, Traditions, and Celebrations9780517574362 |
The Replacement Child: A Mystery (Paperback)$14.99 A strong sense of the city of Santa Fe and its environs and the appeal of the two well-developed main characters show why this mystery was the first winner of the Tony Hillerman Prize for the best debut mystery set in the Southwest. |
The Housekeeper and the Professor (Paperback)$14.00 I must confess that I purchased this book purely because of its cover - which is absolutely beautiful. There's something about shiny, blue paperbacks that's really appealed to me lately (also McEwan's On Chesil Beach and Ogawa's previous collection The Diving Pool), and this one juxtaposed pink dogwoods with mathematical symbols (what's not to love?). I was definitely pleased to find out that the text was equally memorable. Ogawa tells the tender, simple story of a housekeeper and her son, and the bond they form with a mathematician whose memory only lasts eighty minutes. The novel explores the nature of memory and relationships while describing several basic mathematical concepts in a really beautiful way that presents numbers as elegant things full of more meaning than simply quantity. It is a bit peculiar in its mixing of mathematics and writing, but its themes invite reflection, and like most of my favorite books lately, the details are perfect: a character receives the nickname "Root" because his head resembles a square root symbol - perfect.
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