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Fiction David Baldacci – The Target The President knows it’s a perilous, high-risk assignment. If he gives the order, he has the opportunity to take down a global menace, once and for all. If the mission fails, he would face certain impeachment, and the threats against the nation would multiply. So the president turns to the one team that can pull off the impossible: Will Robie and his partner, Jessica Reel. Together, Robie and Reel’s talents as assassins are unmatched. But there are some in power who don’t trust the pair. An Amazon Best Book of the Month. 500,000 print run. Maeve Binchy – Chestnut Street Across town from St. Jarlath’s Crescent, featured in Minding Frankie, is Chestnut Street, where neighbors come and go. Behind their closed doors we encounter very different people with different life circumstances, occupations, and sensibilities. Chestnut Street is written with the humor and understanding that are earmarks of Maeve Binchy’s extraordinary work and, once again, she warms our hearts with her storytelling. 200,000 print run. Terri Blackstock – Distortion Juliet Cole’s life has been dismantled by the murder of her husband. She doesn’t know who or what to trust when everything she has believed to be true about her marriage has been a lie. C. J. Box – Stone Cold Everything about the ranch is a mystery. Rumors abound about the reclusive millionaire who owns it, the women who live with him, the private airstrip, the sudden disappearances. And, most persistent of all, that it is all funded by murder. Joe Pickett is tasked by the governor to find out the truth. But he soon discovers a lot more than he’d bargained for. 14th in the bestselling Joe Pickett series. Patricia Briggs – Night Broken An unexpected phone call heralds a new challenge for Mercy. Her mate Adam’s ex-wife is in trouble, on the run from her new boyfriend. Adam isn’t the kind of man to turn away a person in need—and Mercy knows it. But with Christy holed up in Adam’s house, Mercy can’t shake the feeling that something about the situation isn’t right. Mercedes Thompson series Book 8. Urban fantasy. Harlan Coben – Missing You It’s a profile, like all the others on the online dating site. But as NYPD Detective Kat Donovan focuses on the accompanying picture, she feels her whole world explode, as emotions she’s ignored for decades come crashing down on her. Staring back at her is her ex-fiancĂ© Jeff, the man who shattered her heart 18 years ago, never to be seen or heard from again. NY Times bestselling author. Robert Coover – The Brunist Day of Wrath The Brunist Day of Wrath, the long-awaited sequel to the award-winning The Origin of the Brunists, is both a scathing indictment of fundamentalism and a careful examination of a world where religion competes with money, common sense, despair, and reason. Featured in The Millions Great 2014 Preview. Long awaited sequel to The Origin of the Brunists. Gregoire Delacourt – My Wish List Jocelyne lives in a small town in France where she runs a fabric shop, has been married to the same man for twenty-one years, and has raised two children. She is beginning to wonder what happened to all those dreams she had when she was seventeen. Could her life have been different? Then she wins the lottery—and suddenly finds the world at her fingertips. Indie Next Choice. Booklist starred review. “[A book] the late novelist Josephine Hart might have written." —Kirkus Reviews D. Foy – Made to Break Two days before New Years, a pack of five friends—three men and two women—head to a remote cabin near Lake Tahoe to celebrate the holidays. They’ve been buddies forever, banded together by scrapes and squalor, their relationships defined by these wild times. Picked by Flavorwire as one of the 15 Most Anticipated Books of 2014. Heather Graham – Waking the Dead Aspiring politician Fielding Pierce and social activist Sarah Williams are madly in love. But while both are passionate liberals, their very different approaches to their beliefs result in a rollercoaster relationship. Nevertheless, when Sarah is killed in a terrorist attack during a mission to help Chilean refugees, Fielding is devastated and engrosses himself in his political ambitions. Goodreads Most Anticipated Mysteries of 2014. Amazon Best Book of the Month. David Grossman – Falling Out of Time In Falling Out of Time, David Grossman has created a genre-defying drama-part play, part prose, pure poetry-to tell the story of bereaved parents setting out to reach their lost children. Multi-award winning Israeli novelist. CNN: 18 Books to Read in 2014. The Millions’ Great 2014 Preview. Kristan Higgins – Waiting On You Colleen O’Rourke is in love with love … just not when it comes to herself. Most nights, she can be found behind the bar at the Manningsport, New York, tavern she owns with her twin brother, doling out romantic advice to the lovelorn, mixing martinis, and staying more or less happily single. An Amazon Best Book of the Month. Greg Iles – Natchez Burning Growing up in the rural Southern hamlet of Natchez, Mississippi, Penn Cage learned everything he knows about honor and duty from his father, Tom Cage. But now the beloved family doctor and pillar of the community is accused of murdering Violet Davis, the beautiful nurse with whom he worked in the dark days of the early 1960s. Sure bestseller. Susanna Kaysen – Cambridge London, Florence, Athens: Susanna, the precocious narrator of Cambridge, would rather be home than in any of these places. Uprooted from the streets around Harvard Square, she feels lost and excluded in all the locations to which her father’s career takes the family. She comes home with relief–but soon enough wonders if outsiderness may be her permanent condition. A fictionalized prequel to the bestselling Girl, Interrupted. Jean Hanff Korelitz – You Should Have Known Grace Reinhart Sachs is living the only life she ever wanted for herself. Dismayed by the ways in which women delude themselves, Grace is also the author of a book You Should Have Known, in which she cautions women to really hear what men are trying to tell them. But weeks before the book is published a chasm opens in her own life. CNN: 18 Books to Read in 2014. PW Starred Review Julie Anne Long – Between the Devil and Ian Eversea The moment orphaned American heiress Titania “Tansy” Danforth arrives on English shores she cuts a swath through Sussex, enslaving hearts and stealing beaux. She knows she’s destined for a spectacular titled marriage–but the only man who fascinates her couldn’t be more infamous or less interested. Romantic Times: Book Hankering 2014. Peter Matthiessen – In Paradise In the winter of 1996, more than a hundred women and men of diverse nationality, background, and belief gather at the site of a former concentration camp for an unprecedented purpose: a weeklong retreat during which they will offer prayer and witness at the crematoria and meditate in all weathers on the selection platform, while eating and sleeping in the quarters of the Nazi officers. Matthiessen passed away recently. His first fiction since the 2008 National Book Award winner Shadow Country. The Millions’ Great 2014 Preview. Indie Next. An Amazon Best Book of the Month. Christopher Moore – The Serpent of Venice Another visit to the lunacy of Moore's literary worlds. After taking on King Lear in Fool, he addresses both The Merchant of Venice and Othello in this one—with a dash of Poe's The Cask of Amontillado thrown in for good measure. After Pocket the Fool stops a plot to start a new Crusade, he is thrown overboard and is saved by what he thinks is a seriously horny mermaid and washes up in Venice's Jewish ghetto where he is rescued by shylock's daughter. Booklist and Library Journal starred reviews. Bestselling author. Brenda Novak – Come Home to Me When Presley Christensen returns to Whiskey Creek with her little boy after two years away, she has completely changed her life. She’s made peace with her past and overcome the negative behavior that resulted from her difficult childhood. Now she’s back in the small town that was the closest thing to “home” she ever knew–the town where she can be with the sister who’s her only family. An Amazon Best Book of the Month. Helen Oyeyemi – Boy, Snow, Bird The Snow White fairy tale used to explore racism. Boy Novak arrives by chance in a small town in Massachusetts in 1953, looking for beauty—the opposite of the life she had in New York. She marries a local widower, but when her daughter Bird is born, she has dark skin. Boy never would have thought of herself as a wicked stepmother, but. . . . Oyeyemi is being compared to Angela Carter, Salman Rushdie, Jeanette Winterson, and Toni Morrison, among others. CNN: 18 Books to Read in 2014. The Millions Great 2014 Preview. Huffington Post: 30 Books You Need to Read in 2014. Hot Galley of ALA Midwinter. IndieNext Choice. Featured on the cover of The New York Times Book Review. An Amazon Best Book of the Month. Anne Perry – Death on Blackheath As commander of the powerful Special Branch, Thomas Pitt has the job of keeping Britain safe from spies and traitors. So there’ s no obvious reason why he is suddenly ordered to investigate two minor incidents: the blood, hair, and shards of glass discovered outside the home of naval weapons expert Dudley Kynaston, and the simultaneous disappearance of Mrs. Kynaston’ s beautiful lady’ s maid. Thomas and Charlotte Pitt series, Book 29. Peter Robinson – Children of the Revolution The body of disgraced college lecturer Gavin Miller is found on an abandoned railway line by a woman out walking her dog early one winter morning. In the four years since Miller’s dismissal for sexual misconduct, he’s been living like a hermit, listening to music from his college days and existing as frugally as possible on the outskirts of a small village. So where did he get the five thousand pounds found in his pocket? Inspector Banks series, Book 21. Robinson is a bestselling author in the UK, Canada and the US. Inspector Banks can be seen on PBS affiliates. Ann B. Ross – Miss Julia's Marvelous Makeover Its summer in Abbotsville, and Miss Julia has visions of enjoying a life of leisure. But before she can even sip some iced tea on her front porch, a letter from her long-lost cousin Elsie informs her that Elsie's granddaughter is on a bus headed to Abbotsville that very day. Reminding Miss Julia of an old family debt, Elsie proclaims that she is sending Trixie to Miss Julia's to learn to become a lady. A perennial favorite. Mona Simpson – Casebook From the acclaimed and award-winning author of Anywhere but Here and My Hollywood, a powerful new novel about a young boy’s quest to uncover the mysteries of his unraveling family. What he discovers turns out to be what he least wants to know: the inner workings of his parents’ lives. And even then he can’t stop searching. The Millions’ Great 2014 Preview. Huffington Post: 30 Books You Need to Read in 2014. Amazon Best Book of the Month. Danielle Steel – Power Play Even though Harvard-educated Fiona Carson has proven herself under fire as CEO of National Technology Advancement, a multibillion-dollar high-tech company based in Palo Alto, California, she still has to meet the challenges of her world every day. Devoted single mother, world-class strategist, and tough negotiator, Fiona weighs every move she makes, and reserves any personal time for her children. Isolation and constant pressure are givens for her as a woman in a man’s world. Always a bestseller. Rupert Thomson – Secrecy Zummo, a Sicilian sculptor, is summoned by Cosimo III to join the Medici court. Late seventeenth-century Florence is a hotbed of repression and hypocrisy. All forms of pleasure are brutally punished, and the Grand Duke himself, a man for whom marriage has been an exquisite torture, hides his pain beneath a show of excessive piety. An Amazon Best Book of the Month. Randy Wayne White – Bone Deep When a Crow Indian acquaintance of Tomlinson’s asks him to help recover a relic stolen from his tribe, Doc Ford is happy to tag along—but neither Doc nor Tomlinson realize what they’ve let themselves in for.
Nonfiction Shane Bauer, Joshua Fattal, Sarah Shourd – A Sliver of Light: Three Americans Imprisoned in Iran In summer 2009 Shane Bauer, Josh Fattal, and Sarah Shourd were hiking in Iraqi Kurdistan when they unknowingly crossed into Iran and were captured by a border patrol. Accused of espionage, the three Americans ultimately found themselves in Tehran’s infamous Evin Prison, where they discovered that pooling their strength of will and relying on each other were the only ways they could survive. Library Journal: 12 Spring Books You Shouldn't Miss. Jeff Bauman – Stronger When Jeff Bauman woke up on Tuesday, April 16th, 2013 in the Boston Medical Center, groggy from a series of lifesaving surgeries and missing his legs, the first thing he did was try to speak. When he realized he couldn’t, he asked for a pad and paper and wrote down seven words: “Saw the guy. Looked right at me,” setting off one of the biggest manhunts in the country’s history. 250,000 print run. Martha Collins – Day unto Day: Poems Martha Collins offers haunting reflections on time and other subjects in Day unto Day, a spare and subtle seventh collection. The book consists of six sequences: during one month each year, for six years, Collins wrote a short poem each day. Holly George-Warren – A Man Called Destruction: The Life and Music of Alex Chilton, from Box Tops to Big Star to Backdoor Man In the career-spanning and revelatory A Man Called Destruction, longtime Chilton confidante Holly George-Warren has interviewed more than 100 bandmates, friends, and family members to flesh out a man who presided over—and influenced—four decades of American musical history, rendered here with new perspective through the adventures of a true iconoclast. One of Flavorwire's 15 Most Anticipated Books of 2014 Annabelle Gurwitch – I See You Made an Effort: Compliments, Indignities, and Survival Stories from the Edge of 50 Whether falling in lust at the Genius bar, navigating the extensive—and treacherously expensive—anti aging offerings at a department-store beauty counter, coping with the assisted suicide of her best friend, negotiating the ins and outs of acceptable behavior with her teenage kid, or the thudding financial reality of the “never-tirement” generation that leads her to petty theft, Gurwitch’s essays prove her a remarkably astute writer in her prime. Gurwitch is a comedian and actress who has appeared on Seinfeld and Not Necessarily the News, and Dinner & a Movie. She is the author of You Say Tomato, I Say Shut Up. Arianna Huffington – Thrive: The Third Metric to Redefining Success and Creating a Life of Well-Being In this deeply personal book, Arianna talks candidly about her own challenges with managing time and prioritizing the demands of a career and two daughters. Drawing on the latest groundbreaking research and scientific findings in the fields of psychology, sports, sleep and physiology that show the profound and transformative effects of meditation, mindfulness, unplugging and giving, Arianna shows us the way to a revolution in our culture, our thinking, our workplaces, and our lives. Quartz: 12 Business Books You Will Need to Read in 2014. An Amazon Best Book of the Month. Jonah Keri – Up, Up, and Away: The Kid, the Hawk, Rock, Vladi, Pedro, le Grand Orange, Youppi!, the Crazy Business of Baseball, and the Ill-fated but Unforgettable Montreal Expos The definitive history of the Montreal Expos by the definitive Expos fan, the New York Times bestselling sportswriter and Grantland columnist Jonah Keri. 2014 is the 20th anniversary of the strike that killed baseball in Montreal, and the 10th anniversary of the team’s move to Washington, DC. But the memories aren’t dead–not by a long shot. One of the National Post's 25 Most Anticipated Canadian Books of 2014. Greg Marchand – Frenchie: New Bistro Cooking On a quiet cobblestoned side street north of Les Halles in Paris, a veritable food revolution is happening thanks to Chef Greg Marchand’s game-changing restaurant, Frenchie. Here are some of his most inspired and deeply original recipes, dishes that are radiant not just in color but in flavor, and filled with alluring hints of international influences. An Amazon Best Book of the Month. Pat and Gina Neely – Back Home with the Neelys For Pat and Gina Neely the secret to a truly happy home is a lively mix of food and family. In their new book, the best-selling authors draw on their down-home roots and revisit the classic Southern recipes that have been passed down through generations. By the hosts of the Food Network hit series Down Home with the Neelys. 100,000 print run. George Saunders – Congratulations, By the Way This book expands on an eight-minute convocation address Saunders gave at Syracuse University, which was subsequently posted on the New York Times website and drew over one million page views. An Amazon Best Book of the Month. 100,000 print run. Noah Strycker – The Thing with Feathers: The Surprising Lives of Birds and What They Reveal About Being Human Birds are highly intelligent animals, yet their intelligence is dramatically different from our own and has been little understood. As scientists come to understand more about the secrets of bird life, they are unlocking fascinating insights into memory, game theory, and the nature of intelligence itself. Matt Taibbi – The Divide: American Injustice in the Age of the Wealth Gap Over the last two decades, America has been falling deeper and deeper into a statistical mystery. As poverty has gone up, crime rates have come down, but the prison population has doubled. Meanwhile, fraud by the rich wipes out 40 per cent of the world’s wealth — yet the rich get massively richer, and no one goes to jail. Reviews say: "advocacy journalism at its finest," "impossible to put down," "brilliant." Taibbi has been called Hunter S. Thompson's heir. Tim Townsend – Mission at Nuremberg: An American Army Chaplain and the Trial of the Nazis Mission at Nuremberg is Tim Townsend’s gripping story of the American Army chaplain sent to save the souls of the Nazis incarcerated at Nuremberg, a compelling and thought-provoking tale that raises questions of faith, guilt, morality, vengeance, forgiveness, salvation, and the essence of humanity. Desmond Tutu – The Book of Forgiving: The Fourfold Path for Healing Ourselves and Our World Nobel laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu has witnessed some of the worst crimes people can inflict on others. So wherever he goes, he inevitably gets asked this question. This book is his answer. Writing with his daughter, Mpho, an Anglican priest, they lay out the simple but profound truths about the significance of forgiveness, how it works, why everyone needs to know how to grant it and receive it, and why granting forgiveness is the greatest gift we can give to ourselves when we have been wronged. Elizabeth Warren – A Fighting Chance As a child in small-town Oklahoma, Elizabeth Warren yearned to go to college and then become an elementary school teacher—an ambitious goal, given her family’s modest means. Early marriage and motherhood seemed to put even that dream out of reach, but fifteen years later she was a distinguished law professor with a deep understanding of why people go bankrupt.
*Geographical rights may vary by title. |
A Semi-automated Technology Roundup Provided by Linebaugh Public Library IT Staff | techblog.linebaugh.org
Thursday, May 1, 2014
Weekly eHighlights: Adult Edition
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