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Rating: Summary: A voice to hear Review: If promises are made to be broken, are secrets made to be revealed?As Marcus Stevens's "Useful Girl" illustrates, what is buried deepest from view is sometimes the most important link to human relationships. The metaphors are thicker than Cheyenne fog on the Yellowstone River, but "Useful Girl" unfolds as beautifully as the river itself. Like Pete Fromm's 2003 "As Cool As I Am," Stevens has written a contemporary Montana story from a young woman's perspective. Clearly, neither present-day Montana nor first-person female stories by male writers are unexplored territories, but both can be inaccessible. Stevens is a gifted writer who has mastered both.
Rating: Summary: Great Read Review: Stevens topped his last book, "Curve of The World," which I thought could not be done. I love the way he writes. He brings you into the story - you feel the cold of the snow and the fear. I love the way he weaves a present day story with one of history. I read this in 3 nights it was so engrossing.
Rating: Summary: Beautiful Review: This is a beautiful book. I love the way Stevens weaves the threads of the two stories together. A really wonderful read.
Rating: Summary: A compelling novel Review: Useful Girl a novel about a woman who observes the exhumation of the hundred-year-old remains of a Cheyenne girl along the side of a dirt road. Life in the Montana town is never the same again. Who was the girl, and how did she come to die and be buried with no marker? The woman undertakes a harrowing investigation to learn the truth, and a personal crusade along with Charlie White Bird to protect the burial site, despite harsh repercussions. A compelling novel about growth, crisis, and the consequences of running away.
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