Publisher: Penguin Classics

Twelve Angry Men by Reginald Rose

June 7, 2016 Whitney Review 2 Comments
Twelve Angry Men by Reginald Rose

First Impressions After watching Making a Murderer, Twelve Angry Men by Reginald Rose, a play about a jury debating the innocence of a juvenile being tried for murder seemed appropriate. Impressions While Reading It a first seemed like a simple story but it was anything but and the tensions the bounced from one to another […]

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Review: A Study in Scarlet

February 18, 2015 Whitney Review 0 Comments
Review: A Study in Scarlet

Embarrassingly, I mainly know Sherlock Holmes through Basil Rathbone and Benedict Cumberbatch.  I finally decided that enough was enough and decided to read the books myself.  I now have a whole new appreciation for the adaptations of Arthur Conan Doyle’s novels, particularly Sherlock.  Perhaps it is because I grew up watching the Basil Rathbone films, […]

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Book Review: The Death of Ivan Ilych

December 21, 2012 Whitney Review 0 Comments
Book Review: The Death of Ivan Ilych

This novella begins with Ivan’s colleagues of the court upon hearing of his death and bickering over who will be promoted to his place.  Already, I smelled greed as a prominent theme.  The reader travels to his memorial with said colleagues and finds what appears to be a devoted, distraught widow, Oh how wrong they were… […]

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The Hunchback of Notre Dame by Victor Hugo

October 18, 2011 Whitney Review 4 Comments
The Hunchback of Notre Dame by Victor Hugo

I have been in a major reader’s funk, I’ve had trouble becoming interested in one single novel or holding my attention.  For me this is very rare!  To the point of being concerned. Unfortunately, The Hunchback of Notre Dame had to fall in the period. Several years ago I had a friend who had applied […]

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Review: Cranford

June 24, 2010 Whitney Review 12 Comments
Review: Cranford

Cranford is a small town which is high in the population of female.  In the first section of the book, every male who enters the town drops like flies making it feel jinxed or like an old-fashioned sorority. Elizabeth Gaskell’s novel is a sequence of short stories that all intertwine.  I’m typically not a short […]

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