Selections From Oprah’s Book Club

Wednesday, August 20, 2008 :: 6:51am PDT

Selections
From
Oprah’s Book Club
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(Sorted By Year)

A Fine Balance
   By Rohinton Mistry

A Lesson Before Dying
   By Ernest J. Gaines

A Map of the World
   By Jane Hamilton

A Million Little Pieces
   By James Frey

A Virtuous Woman
   By Kaye Gibbons

Anna Karenina
   By Leo Tolstoy

As I Lay Dying
   By William Faulkner

Back Roads
   By Tawni O’Dell

Black and Blue
   By Anna Quindlen

Breath, Eyes, Memory
   By Edwidge Danticat

Cane River
   By Lalita Tademy

Cry, the Beloved Country
   By Alan Paton

Daughter of Fortune
   By Isabel Allende

Drowning Ruth
   By Christina Schwarz

East of Eden
   By John Steinbeck

Ellen Foster
   By Kaye Gibbons

Fall on Your Knees
   By Ann-Marie MacDonald

Gap Creek: The Story Of A Marriage
   By Robert Morgan

Here on Earth
   By Alice Hoffman

House of Sand and Fog
   By Andre Dubus III

I Know This Much Is True
   By Wally Lamb

Icy Sparks
   By Gwyn Hyman Rubio

Jewel
   By Bret Lott

Light in August
   By William Faulkner

Midwives
   By Chris Bohjalian

Mother of Pearl
   By Melinda Haynes

Night
   By Elie Wiesel

One Hundred Years of Solitude
   By Gabriel Garcia Marquez

Open House
   By Elizabeth Berg

Paradise
   By Toni Morrison

River, Cross My Heart
   By Breena Clarke

She’s Come Undone
   By Wally Lamb

Song of Solomon
   By Toni Morrison

Songs In Ordinary Time
   By Mary McGarry Morris

Sula
   By Toni Morrison

Stolen Lives: Twenty Years in a Desert Jail
   By Malika Oufkir

Stones from the River
   By Ursula Hegi

Tara Road
   By Maeve Binchy

The Best Way to Play
   By Bill Cosby

The Bluest Eye
   By Toni Morrison

The Book of Ruth
   By Jane Hamilton

The Corrections
   By Jonathan Franzen

The Deep End of the Ocean
   By Jacquelyn Mitchard

The Good Earth
   By Pearl S. Buck

The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter
   By Carson McCullers

The Heart of a Woman
   By Maya Angelou

The Known World
   By Edward P. Jones

The Meanest Thing to Say
   By Bill Cosby

The Pilot’s Wife
   By Anita Shreve

The Poisonwood Bible
   By Barbara Kingsolver

The Rapture of Canaan
   By Sheri Reynolds

The Reader
   By Bernhard Schlink

The Sound and the Fury
   By William Faulkner

The Treasure Hunt
   By Bill Cosby

Vinegar Hill
   By A. Manette Ansay

We Were the Mulvaneys
   By Joyce Carol Oates

What Looks Like Crazy on an Ordinary Day
   By Pearl Cleage

Where the Heart Is
   By Billie Letts

While I Was Gone
   By Sue Miller

White Oleander
   By Janet Fitch

Tara Road

By Maeve Binchy

Oprah Winfrey’s Book Club Selection: 1999
Against all odds, two newlyweds manage to buy the house of their dreams. In 1982, property speculation is beginning to be a big, big thing in Dublin--and their street is very much in an up-and-coming part of town. "They laughed and hugged each other. Danny Lynch from the broken-down cottage in the back of beyond and Ria Johnson from the corner house in the big, shabby estate were not only living like gentry in a big Tara Road mansion, they were actually debating what style of dining table to buy." But for its various inhabitants, the street is to become a boulevard of dreams--some broken, others created anew. Maeve Binchy has long proved herself a secure hand at multiple story lines, and over the course of 500 satisfying pages she focuses on Ria; her best friend, Rosemary Ryan, a beautiful, endlessly selfish career woman; Gertie, the battered wife of a drunkard; and several other intriguing women, each of whom has secrets not to be shared. There is even an all-knowing fortune teller who early on hints that Ria will travel and start a successful business--two things she knows are definitely not in the offing.

Yet after our supposedly happy housewife and mother of two is confronted by some inexorable home truths, a chance phone call from America will change her life, forcing her to discard her illusions about men, women, and marriage and start all over again. At the same time, the Connecticut caller, Marilyn Vine, has her own lessons to learn when she and Ria swap houses for the summer. Yet there's nothing remotely preachy about this novel--even the bad guys (and yes, they're usually guys) and beautiful mistresses get to maintain some appeal. Instead, Tara Road is a stirring look at the reality behind our consuming fantasies, and a page-turner to boot.
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