The New York Times Book Review (NYTBR) features “Storms” by Maria Fernandez Snitzer

Maria Fernandez Snitzer’s inspiring book, “Storms,” was featured in the November issue of The New York Times Book Review.
Current non-fiction and fiction books are reviewed in The New York Times Book Review (NYTBR), a weekly paper magazine supplement to the Sunday edition of The New York Times (an American daily newspaper with a worldwide readership reported in 2020 to be a growing 6 million paid digital subscribers). It is one of the most well-known and significant book reviews in the business.
Maria Fernandez Snitzer grew up in the same small fishing town that serves as the setting of the book’s story. She had always been influenced by her historian father. She used to accompany her father on his research trips.
“Storms” by Maria Snitzer Fernandez is a published drama, historical fiction, and disaster book with the Gold Seal of Excellence. The Gold Seal attests to the excellent quality of your work and sets it apart from the competition with a superior brand of credibility. This distinction is given only to books with a 5-star rating from a major book review publication trusted by tens of thousands of subscribers. As a seal of excellence, it also serves as a perfect marketing tool to promote your book across a wide range of audiences and build up your author brand with an unmatched reputation.
This book is praised by Kate Robinson of the US Review of Books, who acknowledges that “the author, a Louisiana native, writes elegantly of the literal and metaphorical storms that batter the generations in this literary family drama. The story opens as protagonist Elise Charleville Steiner dreams of the calm her maternal grandmother, Lala, always displayed, knowing that life had a way of returning to normal after any storm. As the author’s debut novel wends its circuitous path through both ordinary and emotionally fraught family scenes over the next week, a powerful hurricane sweeps across the Caribbean, with landfall predicted near Elise’s community of Bayou Chouteau. It is a study of action and reaction.”
Readers may purchase “Storms” by Maria Fernandez Snitzer via these links:
