‘The Rooster Bar’ is John Grisham’s most outlandish yet
As the master of the legal thriller genre, John Grisham has written about some truly shady lawyers. Aside from the corrupt big wigs at giant law firms, Grisham has written
As the master of the legal thriller genre, John Grisham has written about some truly shady lawyers. Aside from the corrupt big wigs at giant law firms, Grisham has written
It would have been easy for John Green to go the easy route. Green had already developed a loyal following—called the Nerdfighters—for his five Young Adult novels, that last of
Glenn Diaz’s “The Quiet Ones,” which won the biannual Palanca Award for Novel this year, begins like a thriller: a man in an airport, a suspicious black bag, the police
Fact: All art, architecture, locations, science and religious organizations in this novel are real.” This is the text that appears at the beginning of Dan Brown’s new novel “Origin: A
IN HIS previous 27 novels, John Grisham mastered the art of the legal thriller and chronicled the range of fictional legal behavior from the absolute boy scout (Jake Brigance from
NO, THIS is not the Filipino version of “Fifty Shades of Grey,” although the three elderly women in Lualhati Bautista’s latest novel, “Sixty in the City” (Dekada Publishing, Quezon City),
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