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Book reviews for "McGraw,_Erin" sorted by average review score:

The Baby Tree
Published in Paperback by Story Line Press (2002)
Author: Erin McGraw
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humor, wisdom and a bag of chips
I can't remember the last book I read that was so funny and so touching. McGraw treats her subject matter-- infertility, fidelity, faith-- with a light touch that keeps her pastor heroine from being too . . . well, preachy. From the first witty, lively sentence to the last, The Baby Tree is a wonderful book.

Grace and Gravity
THE BABY TREE is a revelation, humorous and humane, tender and wrenching. I read Erin Mc Graw's new novel with absolute delight, immersing myself in the dizzying pleasure of being with her troubled, quirky, endearing people. There's a Methodist minister who is seduced by (or who seduces!) her first husband, a doctor who lays hands on his patients when he knows they are beyond the help of medicine or surgery, and a hard-to-handle pregnant teenager who offers them both a miraculous path to redemption. Ms. McGraw spins and weaves, pulling her difficult people into an ever tighter web where they cannot escape themselves, and they cannot escape one another. Curses become blessings. The struggle itself is holy. Ms. McGraw reveals that we come to grace not by following laws or codes or morals, but by discovering our own courage and compassion. We live with true mercy only if we are brave enough to keep our eyes, ears, hearts, and minds open through each changing moment. Erin Mcgraw takes on one of the most pressing social and political debates of our time, the question of a woman's right to an abortion. She finds no simple answers, but she offers us turmoil and transcendence, people whose lives matter because they are as perplexed and as full of desire as we are.

WONDERFUL
This is the best novel I've read in ages. Erin McGraw delves into the most vulnerable chambers of the human heart with her realistic small-town characters, gracefully exploring issues of love, fidelity, forgiveness and redemption with pitch-perfect language and the kind of pacing that keeps you turning the pages. I literally couldn't put the novel down. Not only does McGraw describe her characters so well that you feel you've known them for years, her ability to find their tenderest hopes and inner bruises leaves you breathless. When you've finished reading, you realize that you've come to know your own soul better along with McGraw's characters. This is the kind of novel that enriches your life long after you've read it, and you can't help dog-earing the pages for your favorite passages to return to. My only complaint is that I wished it was twenty pages longer, but perhaps that's because I didn't want it to end! All in all, The Baby Tree is a wise, witty, and soul-expanding novel that deserves a well-earned place on your shelf of favorite books.


Lies of the Saints
Published in Paperback by Chronicle Books (1996)
Author: Erin McGraw
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A Promising Talent
I randomly picked up this short story collection while browsing the "M"'s in the Fiction section of my local library. The title sounded intrigueing (I grew up Catholic) and I decided to give it a try. I was pleasantly surprised to find myself laughing and smiling through the first few stories, and before I knew it, I was drawn into the characters and Erin McGraw's sardonic and honest prose style. Then the last few stories--the title tryptich--nearly broke my heart. (I actually had to skim "Saint Tracy" and "Russ" for fear that I would start crying--I was on public transport at the time.) Although I didn't feel that all the stories were equally strong, the ones that I liked I really loved. The collection is well worth a read, and one hopes that Erin McGraw continues her unique brand of story-telling.

Man, oh man, is she good
Look, the world is full of writers or people who write. Erin McGraw is a notch above this fray. She is plain spoken in her style. She is sharp in her delivery. Her stories are great moments. You could learn a lot by reading her stories. The first thing you'd learn is what great writing looks like in book form.
It's dumb, base and so very Hemingway of me, but; when reading her stuff, I think about bullfighting. What's up with that? Read this book and tell me. I want to know.

Highly recommended
Lies of the Saints is a rich, wonderful collection of stories! Erin McGraw is a well published story writer. Several of the stories here first appeared in The Atlantic Monthly and for good reason. Each story is a separate gem, finely tuned, always surprising, and often very funny as well. Erin McGraw has deep affection for her characters, who range from a radio talk show host beseiged on air by the attentions of her ex-husband to a surburban housewife who inexplicably begins to perform miracles (to the dismay of her family) to a much misused divorcee who returns home to her drunken, unwelcoming father only to find personal freedom in a most unlikely place. Three of the stories are interlinked, relating a family history of sorts. These are highly readable, literary stories in which not one word is wasted.


Bodies at Sea (Illinois Short Fiction)
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Illinois Pr (Trd) (1989)
Author: Erin McGraw
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