Fiction

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“You need not be a bird lover or watcher to enjoy this book, but there’s a good chance you will love both birds and life more by its end.”

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“‘Lovecraft saw it coming . . . his stories weren’t fantasies . . . they were predictions . . .’”

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“Gloriana is a sumptuous piece of literature: an important, unbridled, and passionate piece of art.”

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“The Thames holds the collective memory of the city and its dwellers . . . it’s a sacred river granting death and rebirth.”

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Falling under the category of “man drops out of society and goes off to desert to find himself,” this short novel loses direction midway through.

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Time is gone . . . absolutely, completely, inexplicably gone.

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another exciting Sigma Force adventure.”

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“There are mysteries men can only guess at, which age by age they may solve only in part.”

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Good guys? Bad guys? Morality? Ethics? Who's to say where any of this plays in to The Troop. This is not the usual superhero fare.

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The Knife Slipped is a gift to aficionados of the Cool and Lam series . . .”

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“‘Let’s raise a glass of sparkling champagne to the great blondes of Hollywood: the sacred and the profane, the damned and the deified, the fragile and the unassailable, with Harlow’s line from

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Joy Enright is a high-school senior in Chilton, New York State.

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Crime fiction and suspense author Lawrence Block has been publishing for more than 50 years, and his latest offering is a case study in the crafting of a successful anthology of fiction: begin with

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“a novel that’s many cuts above its genre.”

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Plaid and Plagiarism by Molly MacRae is the first in the new Highland Bookshop Mystery Series.

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Rudy, a naively determined and enthusiastically optimistic tree frog, joins the ranks of SpongeBob and Dory as Brian Smith and Mike Raicht team up to deliver another fun and adventurous graphic nov

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Out of Bounds is Val McDermid’s 30th novel.

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Rita Mae Brown’s latest novel Cakewalk elicits from the reader a certain WTF response.

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“Truth . . . the one thing people will do anything to hide . . . because the truth will always come out in the end.”

A killer is stalking the women of Göteborg.

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“an artful mosaic that converges with breakneck speed toward the end of the book, bringing the story to a climax and conclusion that are ultimately very satisfying . . .”

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The team of Heinz Janisch and Lisbeth Zwerger returns with a revision of Stories of the Bible, originally published in 2002.

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“Who says you have to be human to have a soul? . . .”

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will . . . fire the imaginations of emerging writers, readers, and movie buffs.”

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“A man who fights with confidence wins!” saith Uhtred to his grandchildren. So it is in this his latest adventure. If you have been reading this series, the latest tale will not disappoint.

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Faller is exciting, refreshing, original as it can be, and action packed . . . It cannot be recommended enough.”

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