by Lisa Peet
But while the novel—a tale of one man’s odyssey to free the animals in the London Zoo—was written on these shores, “The plain fact is,” Broun says, “I barely thought of Americans.” Continue reading
by Lisa Peet
But while the novel—a tale of one man’s odyssey to free the animals in the London Zoo—was written on these shores, “The plain fact is,” Broun says, “I barely thought of Americans.” Continue reading
by Juhi Singhal Karan
Does the number of novels that one publishes have anything to do with being a writer, or the act of writing? We think not. This month we talk about five novels that were the only novels their writers published. Continue reading
by Sonya Chung
When I pause to look back (thank goodness for anniversaries to remind us) at the authors we’ve featured at Bloom this past year, I think of the inertia they all bucked, willfully and courageously. Continue reading
by Amy Weldon
Throughout August we are revisiting some of the “best of” Bloom from the past year: Anna Sewell, spinster invalid, wrote one of the most influential and original books to come out of Victorian England. Continue reading
“There is no religion without love, and people may talk as much as they like about their religion, but if it does not teach them to be good and kind to man and beast, it is all a sham.” Continue reading
by Amy Weldon
Anna Sewell, spinster invalid, wrote one of the most influential and original books to come out of Victorian England. Continue reading