
The difficulty in writing this review will be trying to avoid hyperbole. How can you gush and go on about a book without sounding insincere (or a little bit goofy?) Oh, but I loved loved loved this book, hyperbole or not.

The difficulty in writing this review will be trying to avoid hyperbole. How can you gush and go on about a book without sounding insincere (or a little bit goofy?) Oh, but I loved loved loved this book, hyperbole or not.

Marisa de los Santos’ Love Walked In owes its heritage to classic romantic movies, though it’s not, I assure you, a romance novel. It’s more a novel about love – how it happens, how it doesn’t, what it does to us, and what we do for it.

Billy Bryson’s Dictionary of Troublesome Words is subtitled “A Writer’s Guide to Getting It Right.” You should learn something critical from this: namely, that if you’re not a writer, and you don’t care much about words in their most accurate usages, you won’t care much about this book. I, myself, loved it.