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Stephanie Kallos
Stephanie Kallos spent twenty years in the theatre as and actress and teacher of voice, speech, and accents. Her short fiction has been awarded a Raymond Carver Award and nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Her first novel, Broken for You, won the Washington State and Pacific Northwest Booksellers... show more

Stephanie Kallos spent twenty years in the theatre as and actress and teacher of voice, speech, and accents. Her short fiction has been awarded a Raymond Carver Award and nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Her first novel, Broken for You, won the Washington State and Pacific Northwest Booksellers Awards and was chosen by Sue Monk Kidd (author of The Secret Life of Bees) as a "Today Show" book club selection. Her second novel, Sing Them Home, was an IndieNext selection, a Shelf Awareness Pick of the Year, and was chosen by Entertainment Weekly as one of the 10 Best Books of 2009. Stephanie lives in Seattle with her husband and sons and is at work on her next novel.
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Community Reviews
Momster Bookworm
Momster Bookworm rated it 9 years ago
Language isn't all verbal or written, or even linguistic, for that matter. Its expression can take many forms: art and body language, for example. This story in this book reminds me of Gary Chapman's 'The Five Languages of Love'. Just as there are different methods of learning, there are at least th...
Barbara's Booky Blog
Barbara's Booky Blog rated it 14 years ago
The premise of the book sounded interesting: 3 young siblings left behind after their mother disappeared during a tornado; all supposedly with stress related mental issues. The oldest, Larken Jones is an overweight art professor hiding her eating disorder from everyone. Perpetually single but in l...
Coffee Bean Bookshelf
Coffee Bean Bookshelf rated it 16 years ago
I just couldn't get into this one, with the dead and the living and some of them talking, it just wasn't my cup of tea. I gave it a try, I really did...
Abigail Carter, Author
Abigail Carter, Author rated it 16 years ago
Loved this. The story is so multifaceted, but really its a transformation of all characters found in the cathartic breaking of precious porcelain that turns out to have been objects pilfered from Nazi victims during the holocaust. I was particularly taken when the main character begins to mosaic til...
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