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The House on Coliseum Street
The House on Coliseum Street | Shirley Ann Grau
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A provocative novel of a New Orleans woman’s heartbreaking decision, by the Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Keepers of the House. Joan Mitchell has two suitors, and can’t decide whom to marry. A witness to her mother Aurelie’s less than successful romantic history, she’d like to skip marriage altogether. Joan and Aurelie live together in a beautiful French Quarter home on Coliseum Street in New Orleans, along with Joan’s many half-sisters born of Aurelie’s five disastrous marriages. Joan lives a mostly carefree life, but when she becomes pregnant, she chooses to end her pregnancy rather than marry a man she doesn’t love—a decision with grave consequences in conservative 1950s New Orleans. The second novel by a National Book Award finalist and one of the most acclaimed voices of the American South, The House on Coliseum Street is a brave, heartbreaking love letter to New Orleans and “a sad, wistful, young, timeless story, graced by [Shirley Ann Grau’s] fine drawn perceptions . . . and by the still, soft enchantment of her prose” (Kirkus Reviews, starred review). This ebook features an illustrated biography of Shirley Ann Grau, including rare photos and never-before-seen documents from the author’s personal collection.
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The House on Coliseum Street | Shirley Ann Grau
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Shirley Ann Grau knows just how much I want general fiction that makes the ordinary feel extraordinary. THE HOUSE ON COLISEUM STREET is about a young woman who makes a lot of everyday decisions about her fairly normal life, and it‘s utterly gripping. I can see why Grau went on to win the Pulitzer Prize.

Please note, also, the excellent spine underneath the first edition‘s dust cover. I was scared to damage its clothbound prettiness.

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The House on Coliseum Street | Shirley Ann Grau
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I‘m pretty sure I‘ve spent more on books this month than in the whole rest of the year. Today, $6 got me two Eva Ibbotsons I want to reread, a biography of Sarah Bernhardt, and an early novel by a future Pulitzer Prize winner. I think the bottom two came from someone‘s grandma‘s big clear-out; there were a lot of books of a similar age.