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  • Deadly Lies

    She wants to hide the past
    FBI Special Agent Samantha Kennedy is haunted by memories of the serial killer who abducted her. To keep the darkness at bay, she pretends to be a different, more confident woman. This Samantha doesn't fear every unknown face. So she throws caution to the wind and shares a night of unbridled passion with a handsome stranger.

    He needs to uncover the truth

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  • Perennial

    Forsythe's intense and disquieting debut reckons with grief, senseless violence, compassion, and adolescent alienation centered on the 1999 Columbine High School massacre. Her speakers include the victims, the shooters (who speak directly through excerpts from their journals), a teenage girl living halfway across the country, and an adult reflecting on that teenage girl's experience. Forsythe details her settings, such as the bedroom of one of the shooters, in a chilling and reverential manner. "You dream under/ a poster of Jenny McCarthy," she writes.

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  • Tangerine

    *Starred Review* Like a chameleon, noir adapts to its landscape and climate, finding in either sun or rain the climatological ingredients necessary to generate a mood of oppression, foreboding, and inevitability. So it is in Mangan's hypnotic debut, set in 1950s Tangier, where a deadly, Hitchcockian pas de deux plays out under an unrelenting, Camus-like African sun. Alice, a fragile Englishwoman, has landed in Tangier after a sudden marriage to one of those British gentlemen whose pedigree masks his idler essence.

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  • Kindest Regards: New and Selected Poems

    With Ted Kooser what you see is what you get. He is one of America's most loved contemporary poets. Kooser describes the intricacies of human relationships as well as the universal human desire for connection with others.

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  • The Carrying: Poems

    Ada Limon gives us reflections on mortality, womanhood, and the human body. She offers us the question of how we should treat each other in this life. Her answer: like humans. Full of nourishing and passionate poems.

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  • Seeing Cinderella

    The hideous looking loaner glasses that Callie gets until her frames come in, lets her read people's minds. She is surprised to learn how other people perceive her.

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  • Wednesdays in the Castle

    Wednesdays in the Tower sees a return to Castle Glower. One day the castle transforms and adds a new tower where Princess Celie finds a giant orange egg. The castle wants the egg to remain a secret and helps Princess Celie to hatch it. Celie was delighted when a little griffin emerged. Thinking all this time that griffins were imaginary, Celie sets upon a search to find out all she can about the griffins and why they are embedded in Castle Glower's lore. Many adventures ensue and more questions are asked than are answered.

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  • Children of Blood and Bone

    They killed my mother.
    They took our magic.
    They tried to bury us.

    Now we rise.

    Zélie Adebola remembers when the soil of Orïsha hummed with magic. Burners ignited flames, Tiders beckoned waves, and Zélie’s Reaper mother summoned forth souls.

    But everything changed the night magic disappeared. Under the orders of a ruthless king, maji were killed, leaving Zélie without a mother and her people without hope.

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  • Estranged

    Edmund and the Childe were swapped at birth. Now Edmund lives in secret as a changeling in the World Above, with fae powers that make him different from everyone else—even his unwitting parents and older sister, Alexis. The Childe lives among the fae in the World Below, where being human makes him an oddity at the royal palace, and where his only friend is a wax golem named Whick.

    But when the cruel sorceress Hawthorne takes the throne, the Childe and Edmund realize that the fate of both worlds may be in their hands—even if they’re not sure which world they belong to.

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  • We Were Liars

    A beautiful and distinguished family.
    A private island.
    A brilliant, damaged girl; a passionate, political boy.
    A group of four friends—the Liars—whose friendship turns destructive.
    A revolution. An accident. A secret.
    Lies upon lies.
    True love.
    The truth.

    We Were Liars is a modern, sophisticated suspense novel from New York Times bestselling author, National Book Award finalist, and Printz Award honoree E. Lockhart.

    Read it.

    And if anyone asks you how it ends, just LIE.

    goodreads

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  • Jack the Giant Killer

    Behind the everyday streets of the ordinary world lies a Faerie world, where trolls and goblins lurk. Jacky Rowan didn't believe in trolls and goblins, but she has been marked for destruction--and sent on a quest that only a fool would dare take in order to save both the human and the Faerie worlds from a nightmarish demise.
    -- From Goodreads

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  • Reaper Man

    Death has to happen. That's what bein' alive is all about. You're alive, and then you're dead. It can't just stop happening.'

    But it can. And it has. So what happens after death is now less of a philosophical question than a question of actual reality. On the Disc, as here, they need Death. If Death doesn't come for you, then what are you supposed to do in the meantime? You can't have the undead wandering about like lost souls. There's no telling what might happen, particularly when they discover that life really is only for the living...
    -- From Goodreads

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  • Skinny Dip

    Marine biologist Chaz Perrone can't tell a sea horse from a sawhorse. And when he throws his beautiful wife, Joey, off a cruise liner, he really should know better. An expert swimmer, Joey makes her way to a floating bale of Jamaican pot-and then to an island inhabited by an ex-cop named Mick Stranahan, whose ex-wives include five waitresses and a TV producer. Now Joey wants to get revenge on Chaz and Mick's happy to help her.But in swampy South Florida, separating lies from truths and stupidity from brilliance isn't easy.

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