Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus More


Playground Zero by Sarah RelyeaPlayground Zero by Sarah Relyea


Thanks to Stephanie Barko, I am giving away one print copy to the U.S. only ebook copy to Canada Only of ‘Playground Zero’ by Sarah Relyea.

Description Playground Zero by Sarah Relyea


1968. It’s the season of siren songs and loosened bonds—as well as war, campaign slogans, and assassination. When the Rayson family leaves the East Coast for the gathering anarchy of Berkeley, twelve-year-old Alice embraces the moment in a hippie paradise that’s fast becoming a cultural ground zero. As her family and school fade away in a tear gas fog, the 1960s counterculture brings ambiguous freedom.

Guided only by a child’s-eye view in a tumultuous era, Alice could become another casualty—or she could come through to her new family, her developing life. But first, she must find her way in a world where the street signs hang backward and there’s a bootleg candy called Orange Sunshine.

Praise Playground Zero by Sarah Relyea


Semi-finalist for the Black Lawrence Press 2018 Big Moose Prize.

“An eerily compelling déjà vu of the free, wild, and jeopardy-ridden kid scene in late-1960s Berkeley. Uncanny and powerful.”- Charles Degelman, Editor, Harvard Square Editions

“Like a trip through the Looking Glass, Sarah Relyea’s engrossing debut novel takes you by the hand back to the sixties, where social rules were being challenged and political upheaval was the norm. Relyea tells the absorbing story of twelve-year-old Alice and her family through a series of narrators as they each experience the kaleidoscope streets of Berkeley. But she saves her most lyrical and beautiful language for the disintegration Alice sees and the heartbreak she experiences.”- Patricia Hurtado, Brooklyn writer and journalist with Bloomberg News

About Sarah RelyeaPlayground Zero by Sarah Relyea


Born in Washington, D.C., Sarah Relyea left the Berkeley counterculture at age thirteen and processed its effects as a teenager in suburban Los Angeles. She would soon swap California’s psychedelic scene to study English literature at Harvard. Sarah is the author of Playground Zero: A Novel and Outsider Citizens: The Remaking of Postwar Identity in Wright, Beauvoir, and Baldwin.

She remains bicoastal, living in Brooklyn and spending time on the Left Coast.

Website: https://sarahrelyea.com/

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Giveaway Playground Zero by Sarah Relyea


This giveaway is for one print copy U.S. only or one ebook Canada onlyand ends on June 26, 2020 midnight pacific time.  Entries are accepted via Rafflecopter only.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Playground Zero by Sarah Relyea

Prisoner’s Wife by Maggie BrookesPrisoner’s Wife by Maggie Brookes

Description Prisoner’s Wife by Maggie Brookes


Inspired by the true story of a daring deception that plunges a courageous young woman deep into the horrors of a Nazi POW camp to be with the man she loves.

In the dead of night, a Czech farm girl and a British soldier travel through the countryside. Izabela and prisoner of war Bill have secretly married and are on the run, with Izzy dressed as a man. The young husband and wife evade capture for as long as possible–until they are cornered by Nazi soldiers with tracking dogs.

Izzy’s disguise works. The couple are assumed to be escaped British soldiers and transported to a POW camp. However, their ordeal has just begun, as they face appalling living conditions and the constant fear of Izzy’s exposure. But in the midst of danger and deprivation comes hope, for the young couple are befriended by a small group of fellow prisoners. These men become their new family, willing to jeopardize their lives to save Izzy from being discovered and shot.

The Prisoner’s Wife tells of an incredible risk, and of how our deepest bonds are tested in desperate times. Bill and Izzy’s story is one of love and survival against the darkest odds. 

Praise Prisoner’s Wife by Maggie Brookes


“An absorbing and engaging tale of wartime bravery and endurance. I loved it!”–Rachel Hore, author of Last Letter Home and The Memory Garden

“It is a story that Hemingway might have envied.”–Juliet Gardiner, author of Wartime; Britain 1939 to 1945 and The Blitz; The British Under Attack.

“Heart wrenching and heart-warming in equal measure…an unputdownable novel”–Ben Kane, author of The Eagles of Rome series

About Maggie BrookesPrisoner’s Wife by Maggie Brookes


Maggie Brookes is a British ex-journalist and BBC television producer turned poet and novelist. She is an advisory fellow for the Royal Literary Fund and also an Associate Professor at Middlesex University, London, England, where she has taught creative writing since 1990. She lives in London and Whitstable, Kent and is married, with two grown-up daughters. She has published five poetry collections in the UK under her married name of Maggie Butt.

Twitter: https://twitter.com/maggiebrookes27

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Keep Saying Their Names by Simon StrangerKeep Saying Their Names by Simon Stranger

Description Keep Saying Their Names by Simon Stranger


Inspired by historical events and by personal history, a shattering, exquisite double portrait of a Norwegian family savaged by World War II and of a man devoted to crimes against humanity, conjoined by an actual house of horrors they both call home.

Once the Germans conquer Norway in 1940, they quickly discover a tremendous native asset: Henry Oliver Rinnan, a double agent so cruel and manipulative that he would become notorious as one of Norway’s vilest traitors, second only to Quisling himself. In 1941, Rinnan and his gang set up headquarters in an unspectacular suburban house and transformed the cellar into a makeshift torture and death chamber reserved for Norwegian resisters. In the war’s aftermath, this house became home to a Jewish-Norwegian couple still reeling from trauma. Here their two young daughters spend a happy childhood in the very same rooms where, only a few years before, some of the most heinous acts of the occupation had been committed.

Many decades later, Simon Stranger married the daughter of one of those girls, and, learning the history of her family, soon realized that their story could not be told without including Rinnan’s, provoking a plague of questions: What turned a bashful shoemaker’s son into this despised criminal? How could a Jewish family have chosen to move into that house? And how could Stranger himself explain to his twenty-first century son this virtually inconceivable history, and what it means to be Jewish? He wrestles with these essential questions in this stunning novel, seamlessly melding fact and fiction, guiding us through five generations’ worth of history, at once intimate and global, seeking to reveal how evil is born in some and courage in others.

A tremendous contribution to the literature of the Second World War–focused tightly and specifically on a previously unseen corner of it–Keep Saying Their Names reveals core facets of the human psyche. This is an intimate, unforgettable account that compels us to confront the darkness of the past honestly and genuinely in order to build a better future for those we love.

Praise Keep Saying Their Names by Simon Stranger


“Keep Saying Their Names is a deep, yet gentle, exploration of how we become who we are, and how our individual decisions can impact the lives of others. Through the vivid scenes he creates, Stranger allows us to get closer to understanding how war creeps into every fabric of our lives, how it can possess places, buildings, objects, people. Ultimately, Stranger’s masterful book is a pledge for taking individual responsibility: by remembering those who are no longer here, by keeping their stories alive, and by recognizing that we are made of our past. Reading this book is a deeply emotional experience, especially during a time of reemerging anti-Semitism. Its humaneness leaves you hopeful.” —Nora Krug, author of Belonging: A German Reckons with History and Home

“Keep Saying Their Names is a cut diamond of a book.  Both brutal and tender, it drills toward its dark truths with hypnotic force while glimmering with the bright hope that we all might be redeemed.” —Joshua Furst, author of Revolutionaries

“Haunting . . . Stranger succeeds in shining a light of hope by keeping the memory of the dead alive. This tale of triumph and compassion is a testament to courage in the face of the darkest evil.” —Publishers Weekly

About Simon Stranger


Keep Saying Their Names by Simon Stranger

(c) André Løyning

Born in 1976, SIMON STRANGER is the author of four previous novels and several books for children. His work has been translated into twelve languages, but Keep Saying Their Names is his first to be published in English. It was awarded the highly prestigious Norwegian Booksellers’ Prize in 2018. He lives in Norway. Translated from Norwegian by Matt Bagguley.

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