![]() So, instead of writing specifically of plot, action, and characters, I’m going to imagine that I’m still working in a bookstore when a customer walks in and asks for a good read. Most of you who read this review will be familiar with Angle of Repose and its standing as a classic in American literature. The notes were botanical and geological, and not a one was literary. ![]() With a bit more delving, I found I had read the book ten years earlier. ![]() It took only about fifty pages into the book to recognize the handwriting as my own. Buying a used book with such notetaking is not something I generally do. Even more of a surprise as I began reading Angle of Repose (a copy which I unexpectedly found on my own shelves), was the marginalia throughout the book. If Wallace Stegner’s Angle of Repose hadn’t been the Clayton Community Library Book Club pick for January 2019, I never would have chosen it for review sometimes we readers just get lucky.Ī lot of book clubs draw the line on reading books over four-hundred pages, so it was a bit of a surprise that Stegner’s novel, all five-hundred-plus pages, was voted in as our first read of 2019. ![]() ![]() Because it is a new year doesn’t mean a reviewed book has to be new. ![]()
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