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Book Reviews of Stones from the River

Stones from the River
Author: Ursula Hegi
ISBN: 36517
Pages: 525
Rating:
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0 stars, based on 0 rating
Publisher: Scribner
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Write a Review

99 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

Leigh avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 378 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 14
Difficult to get into (about 100 pages), but worth it, once you do. I learned more about WWII reading this novel than I ever did in a history book (sadly). Hegi's characters drove home the pain of having war touch you personally, although you may not be politically involved. Her unique approach to the war descriptions was Shirley Jacksonesque - she presents rumors, bits and pieces, phrases -- and lets your mind assemble them into the horrors you already know took place. One by one, you are introduced to, grow to love, and read the fates of, each person in the main character's (Trudi's) life. Expect to form strong, sentimental attachments.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 12 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 10
Every couple of years, I take 'Stones from the River' off my bookshelf and read it over again. I first heard about this book beacuse it was an Oprah's book club pick. 'Stones from the River' is about the life of Trudi Montag,a dwarf who is living her life in a small town in Germany. The book is from Trudi's childhood to her adulthood. She is such a great character and this book is an outstanding read. I wasn't disappointed at all. My favorite line from the book occurs when Trudi is talking to a man named Adolf, a Jew who is hiding in Trudi's house during WWII, and she is comparing the suffering that he and others Jews are going through to others and he tells her: "...But we can't do that-compare our pain. It minimizes what happens to is, distorts it. We need to say, yes, this is what happened to me, and this is what I'll do about it."
rachelmarie avatar reviewed Stones from the River on
Helpful Score: 8
I got half way through and couldn't put it down! This Oprah Book Club book from 1997 is completely worth the read. It was very interesting and educational - letting you see the German view of WWII. I was, as many other reviewers, able to learn more about WWII than I had in school. I loved the character associations and seeing them 'grow' from childhood in the early 1900's to later on in life after WWII - seeing how they changed and how their families changed or were lost.
A book you won't regret getting into.
CaptCookie avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 20 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 5
Recommendations by Oprah not withstanding, this book was not for me. It depressed me so profoundly my initial rating was "Hate it", however, I settled on a rating of "Didn't like it". Was it well-written? Even a dummy like me would have to admit the author produces a deep novel, too deep for my comfort. I was forced to recognize that many of the bullies, batterers, and bigots that inhabited that sorry moment in history - guess what - exist in our world today. Do I really want to know that? Not! In fact, like many of the book's sad victims of broken dreams, broken bodies, and broken souls, I just wanted to escape that kind of environment as fast as I could. Like a deer caught in the headlights of an oncoming car, I froze up and I could not put this book down until I had painstakingly plowed through it to the finish. Surprise - no happy ending. Well, back to my delightful historic romance novels where I can blissfully view the world through rose-colored fans, the bad guys always get caught and punished, the deformed are made whole once again, and lovers live happily ever after. Shallow me - but at least I won't have to take an anti-depressant! Please, some reader with more discriminating tastes than I, take this book off my Bookshelf soon - if not, I'm going to bring it to my nearest Used Bookstore and swap it for some light reading.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 32 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
I almost gave up on this book until a fellow PBSer convinced me it really is a good book, and she was right it is. I am so glad I did not give up on it and read it all the way through. It really gave me a new perspective on how life was back then and the struggles people went through just to survive. It made me appreciate the freedoms I now have. It was well written, though a little confusing at times if you do not pay attention.
reviewed Stones from the River on
Helpful Score: 4
I am an avid reader and this is one of the most memorable books I have ever read. It is so complex -- the story of how Nazism comes to take over an ordinary small German town through the eyes of a young woman who is a dwarf named Trudi! This is a complex book that will keep you mesmorized every step of the way.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 15 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
This book was long and VERY detailed. I LOVED the way Hegi writes! She has a way of describing things that I think is similar to the way I think! I enjoyed reading this book even though it is about WWII and has a dark edge. The characters are beliveable and you come to know them! I liked it so much I bought Floating in My Mother's Palm also by Hegi. Haven't started that one yet but I think it will be similar to Stones.
Pattakins avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 365 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
This was excellent. A love story set in Germany during World War II; it is about the lives of a community, a woman, the war--all of it. The main character is wise and insightful. Her descriptions of life around her, all that is ugly and beautiful are full, crisp. This book is complex, engaging, and surprising
reviewed Stones from the River on + 20 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Trudi is a dwarf living in Germany. A great book telling about her life and all the people around her. A hard to put down book.
Tata avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 135 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I really liked this book. This is a story about a dwarf -- short, undesirable, different the voice of anyone who has ever tried to fit in. Ursual Hegi brings us a timeless and unforgettable story in Trudi and a small town, weaving together a profound tapestry of emotional power, humanity, and truth.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 30 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Poingnant and special story about a woman's life in a very dark time who endures a difficult life. I loved this book and highly recommend.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 41 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I can't remember why I requested this book as it sat in my "To Read" pile for so long, but I am so glad I did. This book spans the life of one woman... from being a baby, then toddler, then child etc. up to her mid-life and what she goes through as a German in a small town during WW1 and past WW2. It is sad and poignant and beautifully written. As someone who vividly researched what German life was like during WW2 while I was in high school, I learned the more human and daily life aspects from this book than I ever did out of a research book! Halfway through the book, I couldn't put it down and stayed up, bleary eyed to read the last 250 pages. Now I'm reading the next book... not a series, but with some of the same characters.
Bookfanatic avatar reviewed Stones from the River on
Helpful Score: 1
An interesting tale but it's not a book I would read again. I just didn't connect with the story.
augieandlourock avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 117 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I loved this book and I didn't want to put it down I wanted to keep reading it to hear more about Trudy and her stories.This is a good historical fiction book that takes place in Germany in the 1915s.
noisynora avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 130 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Although the premise may sound odd, this book was good - very touching.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 162 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
One of the best i have read.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 11 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Reading the back cover of this book makes you NOT want to read it. Dwarfism? Nazism? But DO NOT let that stop you! This book is about people and relationships and is a wonderful read. Unique, but exquisite and fascinating.
txreader361 avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 4 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Sweeping saga of woman growing up in post-WWI in Germany. She happens to be a dwarf, but she is also very intelligent, insightful, and interesting. Her story gives a haunting picture of life before and after WWII in Germany,the ways that prejudice and moralistic ideas held sway and the results of it all. I was riveted.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 103 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Trudi Montag is a Zwerg-dwarf-short,undesirable, different, the voice of anyone who has ever tried to fit in. Eeventually she learns that being different is a secret that all humans share-
Stacelito avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 78 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This book a fantastic read! It chronicles the life of Emma Blau, a dwarf in WWI Germany. The second book,The Vision Of Emma Blau, tells the story of her Uncle.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 2 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Beautifully written.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 9 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Ursula Hegi is a wonderful writer.
Set in early years of WWII in a village in GermanyTrudi Montag is a dwarf--short, undesirable, different, the voice of anyone who has ever tried to fit in. Eventually she learns that being different is a secret that all humans share--from her mother who flees into madness, to her friend Georg whose parents pretend he's a girl, to the Jews Trudi harbors in her cellar.
holtzy avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 48 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
An unusual beautifully written book, so stunning it can break your heart. The setting is a small town in Germany during World War 1. This book follows the lives of the towns people and the impact of the war on them. A must read, one of my favorite books of all time.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 80 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I thought the author, Ursela Hegi, took a long time to develop the characters at the beginning until I got further into the book, and realized why she did. This book starts out in a small German town shortly after WWI, and you get to know the people in it through the main character Trudi Montag, a Zwerg. Trudi is of small statute, but she has a big heart. We follow her through the beginning of the rise the Nazis and how it affects the Jewish people and the Catholic and Protestant Germans in her town. You will find Trudi getting only one of the three things she desires the most, enjoy.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 2 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I thought it was very well written.Would recommend it.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 179 more book reviews
Ursula Hegi's Stones from the River clamors for comparisons to Gunter Grass's The Tin Drum; her protagonist Trudi Montag--like the unforgettable Oskar Mazerath--is a dwarf living in Germany during the two World Wars. To its credit, Stones does not wilt from the comparison. Hegi's book has a distinctive, appealing flavor of its own. Stone's characters are off-center enough to hold your attention despite the inevitable dominance of the setting: There's Trudi's mother, who slowly goes insane living in an "earth nest" beneath the family house; Trudi's best friend Georg, whose parents dress him as the girl they always wanted; and, of course, Trudi herself, whose condition dooms her to long for an impossible normalcy. Futhermore, the reader's inevitable sympathy for Trudi, the dwarf, heightens the true grotesqueness of Nazi Germany.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 12 more book reviews
Oprah's book club selection. Very good book.
CharleneY avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 80 more book reviews
Really good book!
reviewed Stones from the River on + 17 more book reviews
A quirky but good book about the life ofa drawrf named Trudi. I highly commend it to the reading audience.
reviewed Stones from the River on
This was really a thought-provoking book. I highly recommend it.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 41 more book reviews
I absolutely loved this book. I have recommended it time and time again.
reviewed Stones from the River on
I tried so hard to like this book, and really get into the story. I had read other reviews about how great it was once you got through the first few chapters. I read this till about page 200, and it just could not hold my attention. The main character was interesting enough, but the story just dragged on, and could not draw me in.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 209 more book reviews
Has great reviews. I just couldn't get into it.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 56 more book reviews
A wonderfully written novel that will keep you turning the pages and torn between seeing how it ends and not wanting it too. An excellent read!
reviewed Stones from the River on + 7 more book reviews
This book has a lot of emotional and is written very well
reviewed Stones from the River on + 31 more book reviews
One of my all-time favorite books. A fantastic read.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 7 more book reviews
Well written, coming-of-age story from a unique perspective -- psychologically, historically and geographically.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 14 more book reviews
The further I got into this book, the better it became and I was hooked!
reviewed Stones from the River on + 3 more book reviews
An indepth look at how being different effects everything we do. Good read.
jdyinva avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 408 more book reviews
Well written. Not an easy read but so worth the effort.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 37 more book reviews
Awesome story set in WWII. Really well told, sucked me in!
StarLady avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 8 more book reviews
Good story from a different perspective.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 21 more book reviews
I really enjoyed this book. Trudi, the main character, is a dynamic and strong woman who does not let her differences dictate her life. A very enjoyable and interesting read.
jlautner avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 105 more book reviews
This sat on my shelf for such a long time. I thought about releasing it without reading it but something stopped me. And I'm glad.

One reviewer called it "epic" and I can't think of a better word. It is the story of Trudi Montag, born a little person - dwarf - zwerg - who tried to become normal. As a child she tried to stretch herself by hanging from closet bars. She tried to squash her head to make is smaller, more proportionate.

None of these efforts caused anything but pain, and eventually Trudi gave up on them. She took her place beside her father in their pay library, checking out books, taking in fees, finding books and saving the new ones for special customers. Her mother had lived on the edge of madness so it was Trudi and her father as she grew up.

Fortunately, Trudi's father was a kind, accepting, wise man. During the 1930s in Germany it was easy to be targeted if you were kind and accepting. Her father did not let this deter him from helping when his Jewish neighbors were pushed from their homes and arrested for no reason.

We follow Trudi through her early years, then on into the second world war and beyond. We watch as her neighbors show their true colors and as Trudi learns how to forgive sometimes, but not always. An incident in her early teens caused her to distrust almost everyone, especially those who wanted more from her, who wanted real love.

This huge novel takes a small life and brings into focus what it was like to be German during Hitler's reign, what it was like to be different then as it is now. I appreciated the nuanced portrayals of Trudi's town and neighbors. Written by someone who wasn't alive until much later, it reads like she was there, on the spot.

When they are this good, there is always room for more interpretations of those terrible times, as they bring about greater understanding.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 3 more book reviews
Mostly sad, but very redeeming. People are not what they seem.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 6 more book reviews
One of the few fiction books I've ever read more than once; I come back to this one again and again. Ursula Hegi has a way of making the characters come alive, so they stay with you even when you are long done with the book.
reviewed Stones from the River on
I loved this book...Wonderful story. I could not put this down. A definite classic in modern literature. If you like historical novels pre and during WWII, you will eat this book alive. What a writer!
amerigo avatar reviewed Stones from the River on
I found Trudi's personal story less interesting than those of her neighbors. The systematic dehumanization of the Jewish population through Trudi's eyes is well-told. It doesn't feel like a fictionalized account. The horror of how the war made people turn against eachother, even against their own family members, or how people just disappeared never to be heard from again, is unforgettable.

One passage made such an impression I went through half of the book to find it again:

' "I wish they'd make up their minds," Michael Abramowitz said to Leo when he bought his pipe tobacco. "Is Hedwig a witch or a Jew?"
"Why not both? The more labels they find for her, the more justified they can feel in what they're doing."
"Labels..." '

With this kind of wisdom and insight in her fiction, Ursula Hegi is an author I look forward to reading more from.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 16 more book reviews
Never opened. Belonged to a book club, it's beyond my scope...but I've heard that it's EXCELLENT
reviewed Stones from the River on + 67 more book reviews
This is a great book. It is read by the author so she has the right accent for the character. I am not sure if it is abridged or not.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 42 more book reviews
I found this book tough to get into, but if you stick with it its depth is highly rewarding.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 8 more book reviews
fascinating story
reviewed Stones from the River on + 31 more book reviews
A very moving book. A good read.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 23 more book reviews
I really enjoyed this historical fiction. It was unique and interesting.
reviewed Stones from the River on
Very good book, one of Oprah's picks.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 40 more book reviews
Fantastic! A must read...
reviewed Stones from the River on + 118 more book reviews
SAD TALE OF ISOLATION IN WORLD WAR 2 GERMANY.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 5 more book reviews
I understand that it's considered a classic. I enjoyed it; however, it's not one that I would read again.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 195 more book reviews
a well done holocaust book..trudi is a dwarf who harbors jews in her
celler
reviewed Stones from the River on + 35 more book reviews
Waold War I and II in a small German town. Unique characters. Fascinating reading.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 67 more book reviews
Excellent book. I also have the cassette listed, which is read by the author.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 80 more book reviews
What a long, boring book! This one was such a waste of time!
Sandiinmississippi avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 265 more book reviews
This was fine writing, great characters, and an interesting story line. Some of the events & descriptions are really quite riveting. I came to care a great deal about our flawed though admirable heroine and appreciated that she wasn't painted as a perpetually rosy and selfless creature. The book did seem overlong.
Bossmare avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 306 more book reviews
I enjoyed this book a lot. Very in depth on all the characters. Tells the story from the germans point of view, they didn't all care for Hilter or the party. Many disappeared and were never seen again. Good story and it held me with every page.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 15 more book reviews
as always, she writes with great vision and understanding...i loved this book...
reviewed Stones from the River on + 9 more book reviews
OPRAH BOOK CLUB
POWERFUL, RELATES HOW "IT" -THE HITLER NIGHTMARE-CREEPED INTO PEOPLES LIVES AND HEARTS BY PRODUCING FEAR- A FROG WILL JUMP OUT OF A HOT POT, YET PUT IT INTO A COOL ONE AND TURN UP THE HEAT SLOWLY AND IT WILL COOK TO DEATH...THIS IS IN ITS MOST SIMPLISTIC DESCRIPTION TO A VERY DISTURBING AND COMPLEX ISSUE
reviewed Stones from the River on + 2 more book reviews
I've never read anything like this, it's quite unique. Great if you like exploring a different, maybe, world view, or life experience.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 16 more book reviews
An Oprah book from 1997 - Trudi is a dwarf living in Germany in the early twentieth century. This is a new and different perspective on the horribleness that was Nazi Germany.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 35 more book reviews
Well written, thought provoking, disturbing. The kind of book that stays with you for days after reading it.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 67 more book reviews
I loved this book(tapes) It is read by the author so her accent is just as it should be for the character. I don't know if this is abridged or not.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 13 more book reviews
An awesome story about a girl who is a dwarf, living in Nazi Germany
reviewed Stones from the River on + 16 more book reviews
This is a fabulous book.It is set in Germany and the main character is a young girl who is a dwarf/midget/little person. It is a fascinating tale of her life and the reader really gets a feel for what it must be like to live as "different kind of person" in a "let's all be the same" world.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 9 more book reviews
Rich storytelling about the life of Trudi, a dwarf, in Germany during the second world war. Very Touching. A great read!
reviewed Stones from the River on + 12 more book reviews
A unique look at Nazi Germany, interesting characters, intriguing story. I really enjoyed it
reviewed Stones from the River on + 11 more book reviews
"Rich and lively...This moving, elegiac novel commands our compassion and respect for the wisdom and courage to be found in unlikely places, in unlikely times." -Suzanne Ruta, The New York imes Book Review
reviewed Stones from the River on + 19 more book reviews
From back cover:
From the highly acclaimed, award-winning author of Floating in My Mother's Palm comes a stunning novel about ordinary people living in extraordinary times.
Trudi Montag is a Zwerg--a dwarf--short, undesirable, different, the voice of anyone who has ever tried to fit in. Eventually she learns that being different is a secret that all humans share--from her mother who flees into madness, to her friend Georg whose parents pretend he's a girl, to the Jews Trudi harbors in her cellar.
Ursula Hegi brings us a timeless and unforgettable story in Trudi and a small town, weaving together a profound tapestry of emotional power, humanity, and truth.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 174 more book reviews
Is a slow starter but when you get into it WOW.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 44 more book reviews
Excellent storyline, great character association. Story about a dwarf girl growing up in Germany learning to accept & overcome her differences.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 12 more book reviews
From the back cover:

Trudi Montag is a Zwerg - a drawf - short, undesirable, different, the voice of anyone who has ever tried to fit in. Eventually she learns that being different is a secret that all humans share - from her mother who flees into madness, to her friend Georg whose parents pretend he's a girl, to the Jews Trudi harbors in her cellar.

Ursula Hegi brings us a timeless and unforgettable story in Trudi and a small town, weaving together a profound tapestry of emotional power, humanity, and truth.
reviewed Stones from the River on
A very moving story of being "different" and learning that everyone is different in some way. A wonderful story!
reviewed Stones from the River on + 17 more book reviews
Excellent book...I picked up this copy at a yard sale and it looked like it had never been read.
LeahG avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 320 more book reviews
This is an incredible, well-written story that gave me a new perspective on a terrible time in our history.
Leah G.
starweaver avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 6 more book reviews
The book is a dramatic view of how a dictator corrupts the people as well as how appreciation of the value of people leads to courage.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 18 more book reviews
FROM THE PUBLISHER
From the highly acclaimed, award-winning author of Floating in My Mother's Palm comes a major novel of Germany during the first half of the twentieth century. In historical scope, in moral complexity, in human drama, and in pure storytelling power, Stones from the River is a beautifully crafted and memorable book whose richly drawn characters stay with us long after we turn the last page. Trudi Montag is born during World War I in the small town of Burgdorf on the Rhein river. She is a Zwerg - a dwarf - short, squat, undesirable, different. All her life Trudi yearns to stretch and grow to be like everyone else. But as she matures to become the town's librarian and its unofficial historian, conscience, and purveyor of gossip, she comes to learn that - like the stones at the bottom of the river, which are seen only when one dives deep beneath its surface - being different is a secret everyone shares: her mother, who flees a betrayal into madness and early death; her widowed, celibate father, lame from one war, who attracts the fantasies of many townswomen; her friend Georg, whose mother pretends he's a girl; Hans Malter, the man who cannot acknowledge his feelings for Trudi; his daughter Hanna, who Trudi believes should have been her child; and especially the Jews and other "undesirables" Trudi harbors in her cellar during the Nazi regime. These secrets, which Trudi chooses to tell or to withhold like a master storyteller, reveal the truths of human existence in a complex and tumultuous period. The story of Trudi and the town of Burgdorf is timeless and unforgettable - the story of people both "good" and "bad," ordinary people living in an unforgiving time during which their actions, or inaction, will mark them forever. Trudi is the collective voice of all women who have tried to belong, to fit in. She is the grotesque in all of us, the courageous in all of us. Stones from the River is a moving novel about life during wartimes as well as the years in between.
bookluver-in-sc avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 229 more book reviews
A great story about a girl growing up as a dwarf and the problems that surround her. From her mother who flees into madness to Georg who gets dressed as a girl to the Jews Who hide in her celler.
knut avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 59 more book reviews
This was a book club selection many years ago. As a "baby boomer" I had often wondered, how did the German people allow the Nazi's to gain such power? This book, set between the two World Wars, gave me insight into that process.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 244 more book reviews
Good novel. Told in the 3rd person.
reviewed Stones from the River on + 12 more book reviews
Excellent story! Highly recommend!
reviewed Stones from the River on + 109 more book reviews
a wonderful, powerful book!
reviewed Stones from the River on + 33 more book reviews
Another good read by Hegi!
reviewed Stones from the River on + 55 more book reviews
Extraordinary book!
reviewed Stones from the River on + 17 more book reviews
Wonderful book!
reviewed Stones from the River on + 49 more book reviews
"From the highly acclaimed, award-winning author of 'Floating in My Mother's Palm' comes a stunning novel about ordinary people living in extraordinary times.

Trudi Montag is a Zwerg - a dwarf - short, undesirable, different, the voice of anyone who has ever tried to fit in. Eventually she learns that being different is a secret that all humans share - from her mother who flees into madness, to her friend Georg whose parents pretend he's a girl, to the Jews Trudi harbors in her cellar.

Ursula Hegi brings us a timeless and unforgettable story in Trudi and a small town, weaving together a profound tapestry of emotional power, humanity, and truth."
reviewed Stones from the River on + 34 more book reviews
a beautifully written book! great story that really sucks you in, LOTS of details about all the characters involved. left me mesmirized....
blugrsgrl avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 3 more book reviews
I loved this book
reviewed Stones from the River on + 17 more book reviews
Never finished, couldn't get into the book
foreveramom avatar reviewed Stones from the River on
"What a novel is supposed to be:epic, daring,magnificent, the product of a defining and mesmerizing vision... It is, in a word remarkable."
Los Angeles Times
AmiLu avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 32 more book reviews
Pretty good book. Although a little slow at times.
JoTheMomma avatar reviewed Stones from the River on + 6 more book reviews
with this book.