Book Catalog

576 summaries in our library

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Open A Gentleman in Moscow
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A Gentleman in Moscow

Amor Towles • 2016

16 pages36 min

Count Alexander Ilyich Rostov is sentenced to permanent house arrest in Moscow's Hotel Metropol by a Bolshevik tribunal in 1922, spared execution due to a pre-revolutionary poem. Stripped of his aristocratic luxuries and confined to an attic room, the Count resolves to live with dignity and purpose within the hotel's walls. Over decades, he cultivates deep friendships with staff and guests, including the young Nina and later her daughter Sofia. He navigates the changing political landscape of Soviet Russia, finding love, unexpected family, and a renewed sense of self. Eventually, he orchestrates a daring escape for Sofia and himself, ultimately returning to his ancestral home.

Open Born a Crime
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Born a Crime

Trevor Noah • 2016

23 pages58 min

This autobiography chronicles Trevor Noah's complex upbringing as a mixed-race child during apartheid and its aftermath in South Africa. Born to a black Xhosa mother and a white Swiss father, his very existence was a crime. The narrative details his resilient mother's strict parenting, unwavering faith, and strategic efforts to protect him from a system designed to divide. Trevor recounts his struggles with racial identity, poverty, and nascent criminality in the townships, adeptly using humor and language to bridge social divides. The book culminates in his mother's miraculous survival of an attempted murder by his abusive stepfather, highlighting her enduring strength and profound impact, which ultimately enabled Trevor to transcend generational cycles of struggle.

Open The Glass Castle: A Memoir
The Glass Castle: A Memoir cover

The Glass Castle: A Memoir

Jeannette Walls

8 pages19 min

A powerful memoir chronicles Jeannette Walls' unconventional upbringing by eccentric, impoverished parents. From a nomadic desert life marked by her brilliant but alcoholic father, Rex, and free-spirited artist mother, Rose Mary, to a squalid existence in a West Virginia mining town, Jeannette and her siblings faced extreme hunger, neglect, and trauma. Despite promises of a fantastical "Glass Castle," the children learned radical self-sufficiency. As they grew, they individually escaped to New York City, leaving their parents to eventual homelessness. Jeannette, navigating her past with shame and affection, ultimately reconciles her complex identity, finding success while acknowledging the enduring impact of her extraordinary, dysfunctional family.