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Writers Love Mary Karr’s THE ART OF MEMOIR

9780062223067_f46b9Any fan of memoirs knows the name Mary Karr.  She is the bestselling author of Lit, Cherry, and The Liars Club, and sparked the revitalization of the memoir genre. Now she returns with The Art of Memoira master class in the essential elements of great memoir—delivered with her signature wit, insight, and candor.

Readers of memoirs will really enjoy this inside look at the genre from the mind of a master, but this is also a book for writers.  And they have definitely responded.  Check out this video Mary Karr recently posted on her Facebook page, and you'll find a number of special appearances by Lena Dunham, Amy Tan, Gary Shteyngart, Phil Jackson, and Mary-Louise Parker, among other writers.  

And when you're done with the video, you can download an egalley from Edelweiss here to get started on your own memoir adventure!

-Amanda

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Iron Wolf by Dale Brown

Iron wolfIron Wolf, New York Times bestselling author Dale Brown's latest political thriller, goes on sale today and is filled with unrest and violence set in Russia and the Ukraine. 

For now though, we will be slightly less intense and simply welcome Dale who would like to share some thoughts with you.

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WHO GOES TO LIBRARIES? WE DO!

Believe me, I am a techie, and have been since I was a youngster. My Dad was a techie too, back when the high-tech gadgets were metal detectors and transistor radios. I used to spend many happy hours with my Dad before a drawer filled with thousands of resistors, trying to match the tiny color-coded stripes on them to the one he needed so he could build that rain detector or night light.

I hung out in our local town library as well. It was open as long as someone was there – I don't remember ever being told they were closing, although I remember plenty of times my big sister or an aunt grabbing me by the ear leading me outside.

Today, information comes to us. We don't have to walk across busy Delaware Avenue to the old North Park Public Library to access the treasures within.

I like that. I like telling my smartphone, "Hey, what's the weather in Minden? What's the weather in Vegas?"

Local libraries are places fixed in time and fixed in purpose. Yes, you might be able to grab global on-the-spot information from Siri or another Web app. That's good. Siri might have the information you need if you need to learn the results of the latest parliamentary vote in Sri Lanka.

But what does Siri know about North Park, or Grand Island, or Incline Village? Not much. What's the best way to learn more about these places and people?

Stop in the local library. Introduce yourself and tell them what you need to know. ASK QUESTIONS. ASK.

They might refer you to an app, and that's the way of the modern world. But most likely they'll steer you to a local Web site or link or maybe even a person that will be more than anxious to answer your question, for no other reason than he or she has been preparing himself to do so. You got a question? I knew that. I have a response for you, and I have been waiting to give it to you.

My recommendation to you? ASK. SIMPLY ASK. Folks are standing by ready to help, but you need to ASK. Do So.

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Thank you, Dale. Be sure to get your copy of Iron Wolf today!

– Amanda  

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Barbara Hoffert Interviews Sophie Hannah

Barbara Hoffert is at it again – interviewing with precision. Her questions drill down to the best, most poignant parts of a book, and this time she directed her skills to Sophie Hannah and her latest mystery, Woman with a Secret.

Liane Moriarty says, “No one writes twisted, suspenseful novels quite like Sophie Hannah. I just love her dry, edgy wit and the way she brings her weirdly wonderful characters to life. Woman With a Secret is unpredictable, unputdownable, and unlike anything you’ve read before.”

Sophie Hannah and Barbara are also incredibly smart woman, and this is a great back and forth discussion about a great book.

For the entire interview visit our YouTube page, but here are some choice clips…

 

 

Be sure to run out an get your copy now!

– Annie

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Announcing the #1 LibraryReads September Pick!

Library Reads Logo-ColorArt of crash landing

Drum roll!! We are so excited to announce the #1 LibraryReads pick for September!

The Art of Crash Landing by Melissa DeCarlo is a Virginia Stanley favorite and a great debut novel about a hot mess of a young woman who moves back to her deceased mother's home town and unravels the secret to why her mother fled 35 years prior.

Thank you all for voting and continuing to make LibraryReads an excellent program!

 

Melissa stopped by the offices and taped a message for librarians with a bit of backstory to her book.

– The LLF Team

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Galley Giveaway! Get the Latest from Adriana Trigiani and Homer Hickam

EDIT: Thank you for your interest.  This giveaway is now closed.

 

Heads up, everyone!  We have some extra galleys to giveaway!  And these are two titles you'll definitely want to get your hands on early.

9780062319197_9d54b                 9780062325891_6cb81

All the Stars in the Heavens by Adriana Trigiani, author of the New York Times bestselling novel The Shoemakers Wife, is a standalone, hypnotic tale—based on a true story—that dazzles with the signature elements of her previous work—family ties, artistry, romance, adventure—and introduces an unforgettable new heroine: Loretta Young, an ambitious starlet struggling to survive in Hollywood’s dream factory.

Carrying Albert Home by Homer Hickam is the funny, sweet, and sometimes tragic tale of a young couple and a special alligator on a crazy 1000-mile adventure, from the author of the bestselling memoir Rocket Boys, the basis of the movie October Sky.

The first twenty people to send an email mentioning this giveaway to librarylovefest@harpercollins.com with your preferred mailing address will receive a galley of both of these titles!  Don't miss out!

-Amanda

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Guest Post: Nadia Hashimi, author of WHEN THE MOON IS LOW

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No one writes as beautifully or movingly about the lives of modern Afghan women as Nadia Hashimi, author of The Pearl That Broke Its Shell and When the Moon Is Low Her debut novel, The Pearl That Broke Its Shell, has proven to be a huge hit with book clubs and readers all over the world, and When the Moon Is Low (on sale now!) is sure to continue that trend.  Today we would like to give a warm LLF welcome to Nadia, who has come to share her love for libraries.  

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In some ways, I feel like my first “job” was a herald of things to come. I was a very proud volunteer in my elementary school library in New Jersey where I had the huge responsibility of re-shelving returned books and checking out books with the inky date stamper. I must confess, there is still nothing like the musty smell of a card catalog or the graceful organization of the Dewey Decimal System. I used my volunteer time in the library to explore the shelves and revisit the books I’d loved as a child (my favorite: Freckle Juice by Judy Blume). I love libraries, so it's an extra thrill to attend a few gatherings of librarians, like the mid-winter ALA and the recent Day of Dialog in New York. Being stranded in Chicago for an extra day by a blizzard wasn't even so bad, as I had the company of librarians and great books to get me through the snowy night.

As an author, I’m deeply appreciative of the efforts libraries make to engage with readers – those beautiful, themed displays and the ambitious calendar of events for patrons. I will never forget the amazing, standing-room-only reception I received in my hometown’s public library. What a treat to return to Warwick, New York and speak to a crowd of my neighbors, teachers and family about my journey from a local student to a physician and then a writer.

A quote from author Caitlin Moran has stayed with me as one of the most elegant descriptions for libraries: “[Libraries] are cathedrals of the mind; hospitals of the soul; theme parks of the imagination.”  I sometimes see writing as a return to my roots. Having spent years working as a pediatrician, I am blissfully finding myself returning to these cathedrals with my own novels, awed by their ability to open doors and foster learning.

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Thanks, Nadia!  When the Moon is Low is on sale now, and make sure to grab the The Pearl That Broke Its Shell paperback as your next book club read!

-Amanda

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A Conversation with Chitra Viraraghavan, Author of The Americans

Chitra Viraraghavan's novel The Americans is an eloquent and heart-warming debut from an exciting new voice that brings up questions of race, ethnicity and point of origin, and explores the puzzles of identity, place and human connection, which makes it perfect for fans of Jhumpa Lahiri’s Interpreter of Maladies and Dinaw Mengestu’s The Beautiful Things That Heaven Bears.  Learn more about the novel and Chitra in the interview below!

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 1. The Americans is partly about the experience of Indian immigrants in the United States. Would you say this is neither an Indian novel, nor an Indian-American novel but rather a novel about Americans, with all of its competing and sometimes conflicting identities? 

It is Indian in the narrow sense of having been written by an Indian from India. It is not Indian-American. That makes it, I guess, a novel about America, and about certain types of Americans who are constantly having to negotiate their identities in America.

2. To what extent did you draw on your family’s experiences, or your own, in writing this novel? 

Bits and pieces of my experiences and of people I know—but it’s a fragmented sort of reality. For one thing, there’s a fair bit of drama in the book which didn’t happen anywhere but in my imagination. Also, more than just stealing from the lives of specific people, I was looking at types of people—the "successful" immigrant, the one who doesn’t make it, the one who pretends to have made it to people back home in India, the one who falls off the map, the visiting parent, the second-generation immigrant and his/her issues, and so on. Some of the experiences, concerns and conflicts are common. I was interested in exploring the Indian-American community as a whole, insofar as that is possible. But I also have both major and minor characters of other ethnicities in the book so as to provide an overall sense of life in America.

3. Do you find that having lived in Boston while you were doing a PhD at Tufts gave you insight into the immigrant experience?  

Certainly, although the student world tends to be somewhat insular. I had close friends and housemates who were not Indian and this gave me different insights into America. Of course, among the things we were reading in class was literature representing different types of immigrant experience. For me, my sense of the immigrant experience was sharpened when I came back after a gap of several years and travelled around the US and met different sorts of people, both from the Indian community and outside it. I took advantage of the perspective of being something of an "inside outsider."

4. What was the reaction of the Indian community when this novel was first released there? And what reaction do you anticipate from the American community? 

People like my book, it’s been pretty well received. It’s had a fair bit of press, received several good reviews. There’s been a lot of interest because practically everyone one knows has family in America. When our friends, siblings, cousins and aunts come home, they are "American" to us! As for how the book will be received in the US, I’m hoping well, and with openness. I’ve tried to present different points of view in as true a way as possible, and from my own observations of life in the US. 

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Guest Blogger: Sophie Hannah, author of Woman With a Secret

Woman with a secretWe are all fans of Sophie Hannah and I am thrilled to announce that her new Zailer & Waterhouse Mystery goes on sale today! Woman with a Secret is smart and perplexing featuring Nicki, a seriously flawed but sympathetic protagonist with many secrets that may or may not be related to the murder of a high profile journalist.

Sophie is celebrating her book birthday with an LLF post! 

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When I was a teenager, I went through a long phase of reading only blockbusters with swirly, embossed titles, written by authors with at least three parts to their names: Barbara Taylor Bradford, June Flaum Singer, Helen Van Slyke (I made an exception for Laramie Dunaway, whose Hungry Women I just adored).  The swirlier the title, and the swirlier the author, the better – that was my motto. After a few years of obsessively reading 'fat shinies' (as I called them), I was summoned by my father for a chat one day.  'I think you ought to read more serious, worthwhile books sometimes,' he said. He offered to go with me to our local library so that I could choose these more worthwhile books.  

It might surprise those of you who know me as I am now to learn that I only, in fact, became gobby and take-no-nonsense-ish at the age of approximately 42 (I am now 44).  At 16, I was a total pushover; I was a Yes-teen.  If I'd said, 'Actually, no, the very idea makes me wilt inside,' I'm sure my father would not have forced this trip to the library upon me, but instead I said, 'I agree. Let's go and find those very worthwhile books', while secretly thinking, 'I hate this! My soul is in torment!' (I was then and I remain extremely melodramatic.)  

Off we went to the library.  I remember my foul mood to this day.  The shelves of my local library saved me.  My dad had suggested biographies as a category of worthwhile book, so I headed straight for the biography section.  Imagine my delight when I found a memoir by a dissolute Hollywood actress!  She'd had many affairs with married men and devoted most of her adult life to alcoholism, often while behind the wheel of a car.  My teenage heart soared as I saw a way of bringing non-worthwhile-ness into my supposedly worthwhile reading! My plan was simple yet brilliant: I would read memoirs by and about the debauched and the depraved.  And so I diligently did, and I'm still fond of all those louche low-lifes I read about.  I feel rather as if they and I are part of a secret gang.  Without knowing it, Sid Vicious and Nancy Spungen are, like, totally my best mates.

Now, when I try to persuade my 11-year-old son to read, I say, "But look: I'm offering you books about boys who spend all their lives on computers! Why don't you read those?  Anyone'd think I'm asking you to read about swots who don't have Call of Duty fed into their bodies by intravenous drip every second of every day!'  

Anyone would think I'm asking him to read something…actually, I can't say or think the word 'worthwhile' without a minor shudder. Even at forty-four.  And in any case, it's the reading itself and the loving of books – any books – that's that thing, the W thing, the W word that I will possibly never say or write again.

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Thank you, Sophie!

– Annie 

 

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Reinvigorate Your Week With These Thrilling Titles

We've all experienced the Wednesday slump in a long week of work.  If you're searching for something exciting to reinvigorate your week, look no further!  Here are a few suspenseful and thrilling novels with egalleys available for download that are sure to put the pep back in your step.

9780062429056_98fe5 Pretty Girls by Karin Slaughter: a sophisticated and chilling psychological thriller of dangerous secrets, cold vengeance, and unexpected absolution, in which two estranged sisters must come together to find truth about two harrowing tragedies, twenty years apart, that devastate their lives. Get your egalley here.

9780062391483_7d006 Everything She Forgot by Lisa Ballantyne: from the author of The Guilty One comes a compelling domestic thriller about a woman who is saved by a mysterious stranger, and the incident sparks memories from her childhood that she’d deliberately chosen to forget.  Grab the egalley here.

9780062297662_72b97 Dance of the Bones by J.A. Jance: J. P. Beaumont and Brandon Walker, two of New York Times bestselling author J. A. Jance’s most acclaimed series characters, join forces in one of the most suspenseful works of her career.  Download the egalley now!

These excellent mysteries are sure to get those minds working again!  Definitely download one today.

-Amanda

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Guest Blogger: Elizabeth Lowell, author of Perfect Touch

Perfect touchElizabeth Lowell is no stranger to LibraryLand as a master of romantic suspense, and she has squarely hit the nail on the head again with Perfect Touch which goes on sale today!

To celebrate her book birthday, Elizabeth has stopped by LLF to share some thoughts.

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A lot of people seem to believe that libraries have no place in the digital age. Let me count just a few ways in which those folks are wrong.

1. No Internet function I know of can quickly unite a child with a good book, whether digital or print.

2. Wikipedia only goes so far. Nothing beats a reference librarian for steering students toward the research materials they need.

3. Many people can’t afford digital devices for their children. A library can help digitally deprived kids learn to use computers. Then they can find what they want and what they need as students and future voters.

4. Senior citizens on fixed incomes love to read printed books, but few can afford to buy all the books they want to read. Having a library in the community is a wonderful reward for all their years of hard work. 

5. Libraries are they heart of countless communities. They offer a safe place to do homework (and get help!) when the students’ own homes are chaotic. In that safety lies a fertile ground for learning and for connecting to a larger world. Without libraries our country would be a poorer, stunted place.

Not everybody takes advantage of libraries, especially those who need them most. Yet still the librarians keep the light burning, the doors of knowledge open, as they wait for the next curious, eager mind to walk in. When that happens, a marvelous alchemy occurs between the curious and the learned. Knowledge is shared and received, enriching both parties. 

I wasn’t raised with wealth. Libraries gave me a pathway into many worlds that otherwise would have remained unexplored. That lack of exploration would have made my life poorer. My deep thanks to those who made my childhood fascinating and continue to enrich my adulthood. 

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Thank you, Elizabeth!

Be sure to snag your copy.

– Annie 

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Eagerly Anticipating: The Good Liar by Nicholas Searle

Good liarI know it is rare to experience the desire for February when it is currently beyond gorgeous outside (#buhbyehumidity), but I am excited about the publication of a suspenseful debut, The Good Liar by Nicholas Searle.

I'm about 1/3 in, but I was immediately hooked. Our main character (but by no means protagonist) is Roy, an older gentleman with a decidedly manipulative air about him. Roy meets Betty and immediately sets to wooing her for his own nefarious reasons. From there the story unwinds across decades, moving between past and present, revealing what and who Roy is.

It has been getting a lot of in-house buzz, and I'm very curious to see how Roy's life plays out. You can find out for yourself on Edelweiss

I'd love to hear what you think!

– Annie 

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What I’m Reading: The Mystics of Mile End by Sigal Samuel

Mystics of mile endThis literary debut by Sigal Samuel is reminiscent of Nicole Krauss’s The History of Love and Myla Goldberg’s Bee Season

Four distinct voices weave together the tale of a dysfunctional Montreal family obsessed with climbing the Kabbalah’s Tree of Life. The Meyers are widowed David, a professor of Jewish Mysticism, but not necessarily a believer in religion; his daughter Samara who secretly lights Shabbat candles and is studying for her Bat Mitzvah; and his eleven-year-old son Lev, keen to help their eccentric neighbor build the Tree of Life out of garbage. Long-held family secrets square off against faith and secularity in this story, written with extraordinary heart and intelligence.

The recent starred Library Journal review says,

"VERDICT Every character in this outstanding first novel is searching for a reason to exist—not just the Meyer family, but also their neighbors and close friends. The need for human relationships and mysticism’s relationship to life impel them forward into very questionable actions that might have disastrous consequences. This heart-stopping narrative will keep readers glued until the very end."

Download an egalley now!

– Annie

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Take a Flight into the Future with A.G. Riddle’s DEPARTURE

9780062431660_5bb36My love for all things sci-fi/fantasy is no secret, so I am very excited to share with you guys one of my favorites of the fall: A.G. Riddle's Departure.  

Departure is an originally self-published bestseller that's a beautiful mash-up of Lost and Oblivion.  The story starts in 2014 on a flight from US to London that crashes into the English country side after experiencing some intense turbulence.  What starts out as a standard struggle for survival turns into a time travel paradox as the survivors discover new technologies and mysterious creatures that seem intent on hunting them down.  Five seemingly unrelated survivors hold clues to what's really going on, and as this small group of key survivors learn more about their new world, they realize they were more influential in the past than they realized and discover they'll have to make a choice in the new world that could change that future forever.

I absolutely tore through Departure.  I couldn't put it down as it stealthily evolved as more clues are revealed.  I loved watching the characters learn about themselves and each other in the present, past, and potential future, and the future that the author has created is scary indeed.  Riddle does not shy away from social criticism and meditations on what people are willing to do to protect those they love.  Definitely expect this book to linger with you.  I think it will be great for fans of twisty, mind-bending time travel stories and speculative thrillers like Wool and The Martian.

Don't wait to dive into Departure for yourself. You can download the egalley from Edelweiss now.

-Amanda

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Recommended: Subscribe to This Blog

Go set a watchmanKate McCune is a sales rep for HarperCollins, and she knows books. She is smart, thoughtful and insightful. I've seen whole rooms immediately agree with and act upon her suggestions. I mention this because she has a great blog that I think you should follow – Harper/Bookselling. It is all of the book and none of the sale.

She has written something about Go Set a Watchman that resonated with me in light of everything that is being said about the novel:

"Did I hope for more wisdom from the saintly Atticus? I confess I did….Do I want the chance to read Ms. Lee’s lovely prose again, perfect or not? Heck yes."

Heck yes!  Still definitely not reading at my desk.

– Annie

 

 

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Go Set a Watchman: On Sale Today!

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It is here! The publishing event so many have been waiting for. Harper Lee's Go Set a Watchman is on sale and you can finally get your copy! I also suggest listening to the audio book because Reese Witherspoon really made the South come alive for me. I think she does a beautiful job of voicing Jean Louise's thoughts. IMG_4069

Coincidentally (or maybe I'm subconsciously just really excited),  I dressed to match the cover.  

Follow along with the conversation by using #GoSetaWatchman on Twitter, and if you plan to use the book for a community-wide read or book club pick, please let us know!

Now excuse me, I have lots of really important things to do…I'm definitely not going to be reading at my desk.

– Annie

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What I’m Reading: The Searcher by Simon Toyne

9780062329721_81019Simon Toyne is the author of the bestselling Sanctus trilogy, which has been translated into 27 languages and published in 50 countries.  He now begins a new series with The Searcher, an eerie epic of good and evil, retribution and redemption.  

The story starts in a small town in Arizona called Redemption, where the townspeople have gathered at the cemetery to bury a local man and are suddenly disrupted by a plane crash in the distance.  As the local sheriff speeds towards the scene, he almost runs into a man in the street—a man with no memory of who he is or why he’s there, with only a book inscription and a tag in his jacket that names him Solomon Creed.  When the sheriff tells him he’s in Redemption, Solomon is convinced he’s there for a reason—to save a man he’s never met, the man the town had buried that very morning.  To uncover his identity and the truth behind the death of the man he believes he was there to save, Solomon dives into the secrets of the town of Redemption, but this small town has dark secrets, and there are those who don’t want him to succeed.

The author does an excellent job making Solomon as intriguing and mysterious a character as possible.  Solomon has all this in-depth knowledge of all kinds of topics, ranging from scientific, to medical, to historical, to martial, and he has no memory of where it all came from.  You have no idea who Solomon is, but you absolutely know he was never a normal person.  We don't get to learn many of his secrets by the end of this novel, but be assured the rest of the series will parcel out his past bit by bit, and a small clue at the end of The Searcher promises it will be astounding.  I think readers will also enjoy the religious and supernatural undertones that add complex and otherworldly layers that make it perfect for fans of high concept thrillers.  Think Terry Hayes’s I Am Pilgrim and the beloved books by Steve Berry and James Rollins.  

The egalley is available for download on Edelweiss, so don't wait to check it out for yourself!

-Amanda

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Sneak Peek: Go Set A Watchman!

Go set a watchmanThe first chapter of Go Set a Watchman, the eagerly anticipated novel from Harper Lee, was posted to the Wall Street Journal this morning. I wonder how many hits this website has gotten since then.

It's the first taste we've gotten of the novel too, and it's lovely. So atmospheric and immediately puts you into the mind of Jean Louise.

I highly recommend listening to Reese Witherspoon read the first chapter as well because her southern, melodious sound wraps you up in the South and drops you onto the train with Scout.

Can't wait to hear what you guys think!

– Annie 

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Cold-Hearted Rake by Lisa Kleypas Delivers Steamy Romance!

9780062371812_19e5dI picked up an ARE of Cold-Hearted Rake as my post ALA unwind-and-relax read, and it was perfect. Strong willed heroines; brooding, reckless royalty; salacious and irresistible interactions! 

Due to the untimely death of his cousin, Devon Ravenel has unexpectedly become an Earl (much to his chagrin because he has heretofore loved doing nothing but charming ladies of ill repute and hanging out at his club). With this powerful title comes many unwanted responsibilities; his new estate is saddled with debt, and the late earl’s three innocent but spirited sisters still occupying the house. However, most inconvenient of all is the presence of Kathleen, the gorgeous young widow determined to be proper and respect the rules of mourning at all costs. 

Obviously these two don't get along at first, but that's because they are so similar in temper and passion! 
Kathleen knows better than to trust Devon, but can't help her attraction, and as Devon grows more accustomed to his new found wealth, he is determined to possess her. 

STEAMY! When this one comes out in October, get yourself a nice glass of wine and enjoy the first in this much anticipated new series from Lisa Kleypas.

– Annie

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A Star for Nadia Hashimi

9780062369574_7ce83Nadia Hashimi, author of last year's The Pearl That Broke Its Shell, returns with another novel about the strength and resilience of Afghan women in When the Moon Is Low.

In her second novel, Nadia tells the story of Fereiba, who packs up her family and flees Kabul after her husband is murdered by the Taliban. The family’s journey through the underworld of Europe’s refugee community to Londonwhere Fereiba’s sister can offer them safe harboris by turns astonishing, frightening, and triumphant. 

When the Moon Is Low recently received a starred review from Library Journal, which calls it "perfect for book clubs."  Make sure you pick up the July issue to read the full review.

Our collective love for Nadia knows no bounds, and we want to share that love with you!  We're giving away 5 copies of When the Moon is Low, so send us an email mentioning this giveaway to librarylovefest@harpercollins.com for a chance to win!

*EDIT: this giveaway is now closed.

-Amanda

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Countdown to Go Set a Watchman!

There is only one more week until Harper Lee's lost novel goes on sale, and anticipation is high! Be part of the conversation by following #GoSetAWatchman on Twitter and Facebook, and order your copy now.

Definitely check out this video, as well. Michael Morrison (President & Publisher, HarperCollins) and Jonathan Burnham (SVP & Publisher, HarperCollins) discuss their thoughts, and the coolest part – you get to see the book being printed! 

Is anyone using it as a book club book or community read? We'd love to hear from you. Write to us at librarylovefest@harpercollins.com.

– Annie  

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A Necessary End by Holly Brown

Necessary EndIf you liked Holly Brown's debut novel, Don't Try To Find Me, you are in luck because she has a second book on sale today! 

A Necessary End is a riveting novel of psychological suspense about a woman determined to be a mother despite a past full of secrets, a husband who’s nowhere near ready for fatherhood, and a teenaged birth mother with a mysterious agenda of her own.

 

story of thirty-nine-year-old Adrienne who has tried before to adopt a child, but this time, nothing is going to get in her way. 

Sure, her husband, Gabe, is ambivalent about fatherhood. But she knows that once he holds their baby, he’ll come around. He’s just feeling a little threatened, that’s all. Because once upon a time, it was Gabe that Adrienne wanted more than anything; she was willing to do anything…But that was half a lifetime ago. She’s a different person now. There are lines she wouldn’t cross, not without extreme provocation. 

And sure, she was bitten by another birth mother-clear to the bone-and for most people, it’s once bitten, twice shy. But Adrienne isn’t exactly the retiring type. 

Enter Leah. At nineteen, she bears a remarkable resemblance to the young woman Adrienne once was. Which is why Adrienne knows the baby Leah is carrying is meant to be hers. But Leah’s got ideas of her own. If Gabe and Adrienne let her live with them for a year, they get the baby, free and clear. All Leah wants is a fresh start in California, and a soft landing. Or so she says.

It seems like a small price for Adrienne to pay to get their baby. And with Gabe suddenly on board, what could possibly go wrong?

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Beyond the Book: Welcome to Night Vale

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The latest CD in our Beyond the Book series has arrived! From the creators of Welcome to Night Vale, one of the most popular podcasts on iTunes, comes a novel of the same name. Joseph Fink and Jeffrey Cranor have used their fictitious desert town where ghosts, angels, aliens, and government conspiracies are all commonplace parts of everyday life as the setting for two women whose lives converge as they try to solve two separate mysteries. 

This CD (which you can access via Soundcloud and which we are giving away at ALA) includes clips from the famous podcast, the authors discussing the roles of libraries in their imaginary town of Night Vale and original music featured in the podcast.

 Check it out and see what all the talk is about!

 

"Encompasses The Twilight Zone, Stephen King, and Twin Peaks, with a bit of Tremorsthrown in." —The Guardian

"Brilliant, hilarious, and wondrously strange. I'm packing up and moving to Night Vale!" —Ransom Riggs, author of Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children

 "There is nothing like Night Vale, in the best possible way." —Maureen Johnson, author of 13 Little Blue Envelopes and The Name of the Star

– Annie

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