The Current Book Club Choice

Black and Blue, by Anna Quindlen

A stunning novel about a marriage that begins in passion and becomes violent, by the Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist and author of "Thinking Out Loud." Fran Benedetto tells a spellbinding story of how a passionate marriage became a nightmare, and what finally makes her run away to start a new life with her son, under a new name. Living in fear of discovery, yet also with increasing confidence, freedom, and hope, Fran unravels the complex threads of family, identity, and desire that shape a woman's life, even as she struggles to create a new one; and Quindlen writes with depth, humor, and insight about the real lives of men and women, the varieties of love, the deep bond between mother and child, the solace of family and friendship.

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ALSO BY ANNA QUINDLEN



Alice Hoffman   Toni Morrison   Bill Cosby   Kaye Gibbons   Ernest Gaines


Here on Earth, by Alice Hoffman

The author of such bestselling novels as Seventh Heaven and Practical Magic creates her most glorious fictional world to date in a spellbinding tale of love and obsession. After nearly 20 years of living in California, March Murray and her daughter Gwen return to March's small Massachusetts hometown. Thrust into the world of her past, March slowly comes to realize the complexity of the choices made by those around her, including Hollis, the boy she loved--now the man she can't seem to stay away from.

Movie rights have been acquired by Michael Douglas's company, Douglas/Reuther Productions.

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ALSO BY ALICE HOFFMAN


Paradise, by Toni Morrison

Morrison's eagerly awaited new novel -- her first since she was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1993 -- is extraordinary for its breathtaking drive, stylistic panache, and enlivening moral gravitas. Spanning the time from the Reconstruction to the 1970s, this powerful work deftly manipulates past, present, and future as it reveals the interior lives of the citizens of a fictional, all-black town called Paradise Four young women are brutally attacked in their home, nicknamed "The Convent." Each of singular provenance, they together suggest the vicissitudes of the era -- of the Civil Rights movement, the Vietnam War, the counter-culture, generational conflict. The inexorableness of the attack and efforts to avert it lie at the heart of "Paradise."


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Hey, hey, hey, it's Bill Cosby!!

"Little Books for Beginning Readers" is a new early reader series launched by the acclaimed actor and comedian. Little Bill, the star of the series, helps get Cosby's self-esteem building messages across. Honeywood's brightly colored illustrations, portraying domestic scenes in a folksy way, will add to young readers' enjoyment. Alvin Pouissant, M.D., contributed an introduction for parents.

Oprah will feature the first three installments to the series:


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Ellen Foster

by Kaye Gibbons
Vintage, $9, ISBN 067972866X

"When I was little I would think of ways to kill my daddy. I would figure out this or that way and run it down through my head until it got easy." So the young narrator begins her life story, in the process painting an extraordinary self-portrait. Ellen's first eleven years are a long fight for survival. Her invalid, abused mother commits suicide, leaving Ellen to the mercies of her daddy, a drunken brute, and after his death to the mercies of her grandmother, a bitter and vengeful woman. Against all odds, Ellen never gives up her belief that there is a place for her in the world which will satisfy her longing for love, acceptance, and order. Wise, funny, affectionate and true, Ellen Foster is, as Walker Percy called it, "The real thing. Which is to say, a lovely, sometimes heartwrenching novel . . . [Ellen Foster] is as much a part of the backwoods South as a Faulkner character -- and a good deal more endearing."
Praise for Ellen Foster...

"Filled with lively humor, compassion and integrity. . . Ellen Foster may be the most trustworthy character in recent fiction."
--Alice Hoffman, The New York Times Book Review

"The story of a redoubtable girl who oversomes adversity with humor, spunk, and determination, Kaye Gibbons's first novel is a work of considerable subtlety and intellectual sophistication, A terrific book."
--Jonathan Yardley, Washington Post Book World


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A Virtuous Woman

by Kaye Gibbons
Vintage, $9, ISBN 0679728449

When Blinking Jack Stokes met Ruby Pitt Woodrow, she was twenty and he was forty. She was the carefully raised daughter of Carolina gentry and he was a skinny tenant farmer who had never owned anything in his life. She was newly widowed after a disastrous marriage to a brutal drifter. He had never asked a woman to do more than help him hitch a mule. They didn't fall in love so much as they simply found each other and held on for dear life. A Virtuous Woman is a multilayered and indelibly convincing portrait of two seemingly ill-matched people who somehow miraculously make a marriage.
Praise for A Virtuous Woman ...

"So true and so vital I would swear that there were moments when A Virtuous Woman actually vibrated in my hands."
--Atlanta Journal-Constitution

"Complex, compact . . . The architecture of this novel is remarkable."
--New York Times Book Review


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KAYE GIBBONS

Kaye Gibbons was born in Nash County, North Carolina in 1960. She graduated from Rocky Mount High School and continued her education at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. While at Chapel Hill, she wrote her first novel, Ellen Foster, which reviewers and fans praised as an extraordinary debut. Eudora Welty said that "the honesty of thought and eye and feeling and word mark the work of this talented writer." The book has been widely translated and has gained wide course adoption. Gibbons lives in North Carolina with her family.

ALSO BY KAYE GIBBONS


A Lesson Before Dying

by Ernest Gaines
Vintage, $11, ISBN 0679741666


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"This majestic, moving novel is an instant classic, a book that will be read, discussed, and taught beyond the rest of our lives."
-- Chicago Tribune

"A quietly moving novel [that] takes us back to a place we've been before to impart a lesson for living"
-- San Francisco Chronicle

WINNER OF THE NATIONAL BOOK CRITICS
AWARD FOR FICTION

From the author of "A Gathering of Old Men" and "The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman" comes a deep and compassionate novel. A young man who returns to 1940s Cajun country to teach visits a black youth on death row for a crime he didn't commit. Together they come to understand the heroism of resisting.

"A Lesson Before Dying" is a novel whose eloquence, thematic richness, and moral resonance have called forth comparisons to the work of Richard Wright, James Baldwin, and William Faulkner. In a story so simple that it might be a lost parable from the Gospels, Gaines has compressed the entire bitter history of black people in the South -- and, by extension, in America as a whole. "A Lesson Before Dying" is about the ways in which people insist on declaring the value of their lives in a time and place in which those lives count for nothing. It is about the ways in which the imprisoned may find freedom even in the moment of their death. As such, Gaines's novel transcends its minutely evoked circumstances to address the basic predicament of what it is to be a human being, a creature striving for dignity in a universe that often denies it.

Also by Ernest Gaines:

Catherine Carmier
Of Love and Dust
Bloodline
The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman
In My Father's House
A Gathering of Old Men



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