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The Silent Girls by Eric Rickstad

Silent girlsAre you familiar with Witness Impulse? It's an ebook original imprint that HarperCollins has to expose readers to new talent. Well, Eric Rickstad is one such talent, and his ebook, The Silent Girls, crushed it so we have since published some paperbacks.  

Would you like a copy? 5 lucky winners will get themselves this intense and twisted thriller about young women who are going missing in the dark, cold woods of Vermont. For fans of William Ken Kreuger, Steve Hamilton, Russell Banks, and Hanning Mankell.

Email librarylovefest@harpercollins.com for your chance to win!

– Annie

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Highlights in Historical Fiction

Invention of fireHistorical Fiction fans, take note! The next few months will find you with an abundance of choice from HarperCollins, starting with Bruce Holsinger's The Invention of Fire (on sale today!). This is the sequel to the critically acclaimed A Burnable Book, and features 14th-century London medieval poet and fixer John Gower in another riveting thriller. Library Journal gave The Invention of Fire a starred review and said, "…aficionados of the historical genre won’t be able to put this novel down.”

Additionally out today is The Bone Tree by Greg Iles. This is the second in his amazing trilogy featuring Penn Cage as he fights to prove his father innocent of murder and finds himself tangled in past Civil Rights murder cases with dangerous and very much present criminals.

On the historical horizon we have Balm by Dolen Perkins-Valdez (the author of Wench), a novel that explores the lives of three people who struggle to overcome the pain of the past and define their own future during Reconstruction, The Race for Paris by Meg Waite Clayton, an engrossing story of two women news reporters during WW II, and Orphan Number Eight by Kim van Alkemade, a wrenching tale of a woman who comes face to face with the doctor whose dangerous medical experiments scarred her as a child and struggles between revenge and forgiveness.

Finally, if you look far into the future you will be thoroughly pulled into the glittering, glamorous past of the Hollywood Era in Adriana Trigiani's All the Stars in the Heavens (out in October). This epic, bold novel includes classic Adriana themes – family ties, artistry, romance, adventure – and mixes in the steaming hot relationship between Loretta Young and Clark Gable. Not to be missed!

Well, I don't know about you but my TBR pile just grew significantly. We'd love to hear from you if you read and love any of these historical fiction novels!

– Annie

  

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HarperCollins at the Texas Library Association Conference!

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Attending the Texas Library Association conference?  Swing on by the HarperCollins booth #1342 to grab galleys and meet authors!  Also, make sure you don't miss out on some of the other great events featuring our wonderful authors.

 

Wednesday, April 15

2:00—State Treasures: Texan Authors, featuring Mary Helen SpechtMigratory Animals (Austin Convention Center Room 6 AB, level 3)

2:30—Anne HillermanRock with Wings, and Stephen MooreTexas Rising joint booth signing at HC booth #1342

4:00—Mary Helen Specht booth signing at HC booth #1342

 

Thursday, April 16

10:00—M.P. CooleyFlame Out, booth signing at HC booth #1342

10:00—Steampunk and Fantasy: The Lure of Distant Worlds panel, featuring Sophie Jaff, Love Is Red (Austin Convention Center Room 16 AB, level 4)

12:30—Sophie Jaff booth signing at HC booth #1342

2:00—Ilona AndrewsBurn for Me, booth signing at HC booth #1342

4:00—Second General Session, featuring Cokie RobertsCapital Dames (Austin Convention Center Ballroom D, level 4)

 

Friday, April 17

9:00—From El Paso to Brownsville: Border Authors panel, featuring Philipp MeyerThe Son (Austin Convention Center Room 10 C)

10:00—AAP Book Buzz, featuring our very own Annie Mazes (Austin Convention Center,Room 17 AB, level 4)

10:30—HC Booth 1342 Giveaway!

 

Click here for full schedules and more information about the TLA 2015 conference.  We hope to see you there!

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Oh My Stars! Great LJ Reviews

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Here's a bit of a sneak peek at the reviews that will be in Library Journal's mid-April issue because HarperCollins represents! Five Starred Reviews for an assortment of pretty excellent (if I do say so myself) titles.

Seveneves by Neal Stephenson: "VERDICT The huge scope and enormous depth of the latest novel from Stephenson (Reamde; Snow Crash) is impressive…all fans of the genre should read—just set aside a good chunk of time."

Elon Musk by Ashlee Vance: "He writes a thought-provoking chronicle that doesn’t suffer for being only a first act, as Musk is still leading the field in innovation. VERDICT Vance’s study cuts across genres and will inform even those who follow the tech world closely." 

The Bone Tree by Greg Iles: "VERDICT Picking up immediately from Natchez Burning, best-selling author Iles superbly blends past and present in his swift and riveting story line."

Five Nights in Paris by John Baxter: "VERDICT Readers will emerge from the experience of this book feeling like well-traveled experts on the City of Light’s sensual history. Charming personal photographs strewn throughout only increase the sense that one is dipping into delicious secrets." 

10% Human by Alanna Collen: "VERDICT Recommended for all readers, particularly those contending with the diseases listed and parents making health choices for their children that may have far-reaching consequences."

Hooray! Don't miss out – snag your copies!

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A Fun Read for Your Friday: PUT UP YOUR DUKE by Megan Frampton

9780062352231Megan Frampton may be one of my new favorite romance authors.  I first discovered her with last fall's The Duke's Guide to Correct Behavior, then dipped into the e-novella When Good Earls Go Bad, and now I'm here to tell you to check out her next delicious romance novel, Put Up Your Duke.

Lady Isabella has been groomed since she was a child to be the perfect duchess.  When the former Duke of Gage—Isabella's fiance—is ousted from his title due to some recently discovered tangled family lines, Isabella's parents see no problem in transferring her engagement to the new Duke, Nicholas.  What follows is a slow seduction that breaks Isabella of her compulsion to conform to expectations and cures Nicholas of his roguish ways.

I really enjoyed watching Isabella break away from her past and the behavior her parents forced upon her, and Nicholas was the perfect person to help her.  If you like heartwarming love stories and characters discovering their personal strengths, grab an egalley here to kick off an excellent weekend.

-Amanda

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What I’m Reading: The Race for Paris by Meg Waite Clayton

Race for parisHistorical fiction dealing with WWII is completely my jam, but I love The Race for Paris even more because the protagonists are some bad-a$$ women war correspondents. In June 1944 Jane (a reporter from Nashville) and Liv (a photographer from NYC) meet at a field hospital in France and decide to go AWOL in order to stay at the front and be the first news people in Paris when it is won from the Germans.

They meet up with Fletcher, a British military photographer, who against his better judgment, agrees to escort them, and the three journey through the incredibly dangerous and sad reality of war-torn northern France. What unfolds is a wonderful story of the kind of friendships that can only be forged in completely hellacious surroundings.  

Meg Waite Clayton has been working on this novel for more than a decade, researching the lives of legendary correspondents like Margaret Bourke-White, Martha Gellhorn, Lee Williams, and Clare Boothe Luce, who defied military protocol and the men who said they couldn't go to report from the front lines. It is fast paced and informative, but it's also a mix of heartbreaking and hopeful. 

Get an egalley now!!

– Annie

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A Dream of Summer

It's April!  Spring just started and Summer is right around the corner.  And yet, it was snowing in New York City for a little while yesterday.  So to raise our spirits—and everyone else's who are stuck in this perpetual winter—here is a selection of juicy beach reads full of sunlight, sand, and warmth to help you imagine the better days to come:

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Girl in the Moonlight by Charles Dubow: A scorching tale of love, passion, and obsession, about one man’s all-consuming desire for a beautiful, bewitching, and beguiling woman, that travels from the wooded cottages of old East Hampton to the dining rooms of Upper East Side Manhattan to the bohemian art studios of Paris and Barcelona.  Egalley available here!

About a Girl by Lindsey Kelk: A woman assumes her roommates identity and travels to Hawaii to accept her photography assignment, but it doesn't work out quite as planned.  Get your egalley here!

Whisper Beach by Shelley Noble: An unforgettable story of friends, loyalty, and love as three women who are reunited in the idyllic beach town where they grew up are forced to re-evaluate their bonds.  Download an egalley here.

Summerlong by Dean Bakopoulos: A deft and hilarious exploration of the simmering tensions beneath the surface of a contented marriage which explode in the bedrooms and backyards of a small town over the course of a long, hot summer. Egalley!

Now please excuse me while I curl up under my desk with a blanket and one of these books and think warm thoughts.

-Amanda

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Welcome to Night Vale!

Welcome to night valeWelcome to Night Vale – it sounds so intriguing. Why thank you, I'd love to visit. Well be warned! Those who visit Night Vale are forever changed. 

Are you familiar with the podcast from the brilliant minds of Joseph Fink and Jeffrey Cranor? The Guardian says it is “Hypnotic and darkly funny. . . . Belongs to a particular strain of American gothic that encompasses The Twilight Zone, Stephen King and Twin Peaks, with a bit of Tremors thrown in," so you know you can expect something magical!

Well, this novel, Welcome to Night Vale, is great for fans of the podcast as well as newbies to the town. It is a mystery involving appearances and disappearances that is also a poignant look at the ways in which we all struggle to figure out who we are.

Joseph and Jeffrey are coming to ALA so I suggest you listen to the podcasts and get yourself an egalley so you can be fully indoctrinated into the fascinating and imaginative world!

– Annie

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The 150th Anniversary of Lincoln’s Death: Win a Copy of MANHUNT to Include in Your Displays!

9780060518493The 150th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln's death is coming up next month on April 15.  Honest Abe was the 16th president of the United States—leading the country through the Civil War, preserving the Union, and abolishing slavery—until his assassination by John Wilkes Booth in 1865.  We've published some excellent titles about this great president over the years, including (but certainly not limited to) James L. Swanson's ManhuntHarold Holzer’s Lincoln: How Abraham Lincoln Ended Slavery in AmericaFred Kaplan’s Lincoln: The Biography of a WriterEdward Steers’ The Lincoln Assassination EncyclopediaRich Lowry’s Lincoln Unboundand Daniel Mark Epstein’s Lincoln's Men

These titles would make great additions to any Lincoln displays in libraries next month, and in order to spread the love, the first 15 people to send an email to librarylovefest@harpercollins.com mentioning this giveaway will receive a complimentary copy of Manhunt!  And if you like, feel free to send us a picture of your display, and we'll post it here on LLF!

-Amanda

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Rave Reviews for The Jesus Cow by Michael Perry

Jesus cowYour friendly LLF team strongly supports reading Michael Perry's nonfiction (Visiting Tom, Truck), so we couldn't be more excited about his debut adult novel, The Jesus Cow (out in May). 

So excited in fact, that we made a Beyond the Book CD with Michael (he's a great musician!). Listen now!

And, as with so many greats, we are not alone in our admiration for his novel.

**** 

“Perry, a New York Times best-selling nonfiction author (Population: 485), radio host, songwriter, and self-proclaimed amateur pig farmer, makes his fiction debut with this expansive yet grounded novel…. VERDICT A hilarious glimpse into small-town life and cowboy/farmer/“Scandihoovian” philosophy, combined with meditations on the meanings of faith, environmentalism, development, and romance. Highly recommended for fans of Christopher Moore.” –Library Journal  Starred review

“Humorist Perry’s first novel combines irreverence with just the right amount of sweetness in a genuinely funny satire of religion and morality in small-town, contemporary America.” –Booklist 

“Perry’s tale ripples with simple-life nostalgia…Good fun abounds when JCOW Enterprises sets up business and Harley’s life becomes ‘a rough approximation of things hoped for’”. –Kirkus 

****

 

I think the moral of the story is, get a copy and read The Jesus Cow now! (How now Jesus cow!)

– Annie

 

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A Grand Celebration!

1000

Here are some fun facts (thanks to Wikipedia):

  • grand is a slang term for one thousand units of a given currency. Several grand can be shortened to Gs.
  • The symbol K is sometimes used for a thousand, for example in referring to units of salary or in reference to the Y2K computer bug.
  • Especially in the United States, the gambling community often refers to denominations of $1000 as dimes.
  • A picture is worth a thousand words.

Why, you might be wondering, did we feel the need to provide you with these tidbits? Well today (this very post, in fact) marks our 1000th blog post!

That is a lot of book talks, author interviews, giveaways, and announcements and we would like to thank you very much for being a part of this Library Love Fest!

– Virginia, Annie, and Amanda

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Cover Revealed for Harper Lee’s Go Set a Watchman!

GSaW_HC-E-bk HiresHarperCollins is delighted to reveal the jacket for Harper Lee's Go Set a Watchman which will be published on July 14, 2015. 

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"There are so many wonderful parts of Go Set a Watchman that it was hard to pick just one iconic image to represent the book. This design is perfect- it draws on the style of the decade the book was written, but with a modern twist. Go Set a Watchman begins with Scout's train ride home, but more profoundly, it is about the journey Harper Lee's beloved characters have taken in the subsequent 20 years of their lives."

–Michael Morrison, President and Publisher U.S. General Books and Canada  

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Go Set a Watchman will be available in hardcover, e-book, digital audio, and CD.

Very exciting news!!

– Annie

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Marilyn Johnson, dubbed the “archaeological Walter Mitty” by The Archaeological Conservancy, continues to receive rave reviews for her book, LIVES IN RUINS

9780062127181In addition to the starred reviews from Publishers WeeklyKirkus Reviews, and Library Journal (not to mention being the #3 LibraryReads pick last November), Lives in Ruins by library favorite Marilyn Johnson is still bringing in the rave reviews.

A recent review in the American Archaeology Magazine says of Lives in Ruins, “Johnson weaves a serious tale of learning about archaeologists and their craft with humor and insight. The wild cast of characters is the stuff of Hollywood….This book is a delight for all of us amateurs who someday want to become serious archaeologists.” 

Talk about universal appeal!  You can read the full review here.  And make sure Lives in Ruins is on your To Be Read pile, if you haven't torn through it already.

-Amanda

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BookPage Readers….WIN! Read, Listen, Share!

LogoEnter to win one book or audiobook for your personal libraryand five books or audiobooks for your local library! Be one of ten winners to choose from this selection of new books.  For complete details and to enter for a chance to win, click here.

The Harder They Come by T.C. Boyle: A beautifully wrought work of literature that explores the interlocking relationships of three damaged people as they careen head long on a collision course toward an explosive confrontation.

Epitaph by Mary Doria Russell: The bestselling, award winning author of The Sparrow delivers a richly detailed and meticulously researched historical novel that continues the story she began in Doc, following Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday to Tombstone, Arizona, and to the gunfight at the O.K. Corral.

A Reunion of Ghosts by Judith Claire Mitchell: The fictional confessional of three sisters who have decided to kill themselves on the very last day of the 20th century; in it they tell the story of a family haunted by suicide ever since the sisters’ great-grandfather, a Nobel Prize-winning chemist, developed the first poison gas used in warfare and also the lethal agent used in the Third Reich’s gas chambers.

A Dangerous Place by Jacqueline Winspear: Maisie Dobbs returns in a powerful story of political intrigue and personal tragedy: a brutal murder in the British garrison town of Gilbraltar leads the investigator into a web of lies, deceit and danger.

The Pocket Wife by Susan Crawford: In this stylish debut psychological thriller, in the tradition of The Silent Wife and Turn of Mind, a woman can’t remember if she murdered her best friend during a bipolar breakdown.

Hush Hush by Laura Lippman: The award-winning New York Times bestselling author of After I’m Gone, The Most Dangerous Thing, I’d Know You Anywhere, and What the Dead Know brings back private detective Tess Monaghan, introduced in the classic Baltimore Blues, in an absorbing mystery that plunges the new parent into a disturbing case involving murder and a manipulative mother.

The Precious One by Marisa de los Santos: From the bestselling author of Belong to Me, Love Walked In and Falling Together comes a captivating new novel about friendship, family, and the redemptive power of love.

Finding Jake  by Bryan Reardon: A heart-wrenching but redemptive story of psychological suspense told from the point of view of the father of a boy who is unaccounted for during a school shooting, in the vein of Reconstructing Amelia and Defending Jacob.

Mademoiselle Chanel by C.W. Gortner: Based on the life of iconic fashion designer Coco Chanel, this novel imagines the rise of the daughter of a laundrywoman who, through driving ambition and talent, would become one of the most influential (and controversial) figures of the 20th century, creating revolutionary styles for women and building an international empire-overcoming tragedies, setbacks and the choices forced by world war.

World Gone By by Dennis Lehane: The epic story of Joe Coughlin continues through World War II, as he struggles to navigate the criminal underworld between Cuba and Ybor City, Florida. Meticulously researched and beautifully rendered. 

Click here for all the contest details!

THIS CONTEST IS NOW CLOSED.

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Battle of the Books

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On April 6, the shortlist of titles considered for the Carnegie Award will finally be announced.  To get everyone excited, the American Library Association is hosting a March Madness-esque competition to see who can guess which titles will be chosen for the Carnegie shortlist.  Think you're up for the challenge?  You can find full rules and links to participate here.  They'll be giving away a set of the shortlist titles and a $50 cash card to the ultimate winners, so make sure you fill out your bracket before the contest closes on April 5!

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Maisie Dobbs is Back!

Dangerous placeMaisie Dobbs fans, the wait is over! Today A Dangerous Place goes on sale and Maisie is back, having spent the last four years learning a great deal about love and loss. 

When her stepmother requests that Maisie return to England to spend time with her ailing father, Maisie obliges, but midway there realizes she isn't ready, so she disembarks in Gibraltar, a 
"most dangerous place." 

Days after Maisie’s arrival, a photographer is murdered, and Detective Maisie Dobbs begins to reemerge and becomes entangled in the case, drawing the attention of the British Secret Service. At a crossroads between her past and her future, Maisie must choose how to proceed, knowing that England is, for her, an equally dangerous place, albeit in a very different way.

Jacqueline Winspear will be on the Book Club Girl Radio Show on March 25, so be sure to listen!

– Annie

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What I’m Reading: Love May Fail by Matthew Quick

Love may failThe ever delightful and lovely, Matthew Quick, brings us his next novel, Love May Fail, about the beautiful and damaged Portia Kane. Portia has just left her cheating, pornography director husband and is desperate to connect with the one "good" man she has ever known, her high school English teacher, Mr. Vernon.

Portia remembers the Mr. Vernon of 20 years ago, inspiring and kind, a man who believed in his students and made them believe in themselves, if only for that short year. Unfortunately, life has not been kind to Mr. Vernon, and when Portia tracks him down in the middle of nowhere Vermont he is a broken man, a shadow of the man she has held in her memory. Can she rescue Mr. Vernon from himself and for her own well-being?

Told from the perspectives of several unique and well-defined characters, Portia learns many things – love, forgiveness, hope – while discovering that good can exist in people (plural).

Definitely worth the read (I especially liked the voice of Chuck Bass: former Mr. Vernon-inspired student, ex-heroin addict, present day Portia love interest). Get a galley now!

– Annie

PS: Fun fact: it has been optioned by Sony, so it will be a movie. In which case, I vote Jeffrey Dean Morgan play Chuck. If you read it, let me know who you envision!

 

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No Clues Needed! Find Your Next Mystery Read Here

Everybody loves a good mystery.  And we've got a great compilation of mystery and thriller titles all ready for download in our Edelweiss catalogs.  But to celebrate the first taste of spring this week, here are three of our chilling favorites.

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Flame Out by M.P. Cooley: The follow-up to Ice Shear, in which former FBI-agent-turned-small-town-cop June Lyons must solve two connected cases whose roots stretch back decades in time—and dangerously touch the lives of those closest to her.  Check it out here!

Woman with a Secret by Sophie Hannah: The internationally bestselling author of The Monogram Murders returns with a dark and chilling psychological thriller in which a woman desperate to hide a devastating secret in her past is drawn into a murder investigation. Get your egalley here!

In the Dark Places by Peter Robinson: Detective Chief Inspector Alan Banks is back in this crackling novel of suspense, a moody and sophisticated mystery full of serpentine curves from New York Times bestselling, Edgar Award-winning author of Children of the Revolution and Before the Poison. Read it here!

The only mystery left here is why you haven't started reading these yet!

-Amanda

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A Star for The Invasion of the Tearling!

9780062290397_863ccWe certainly made no secret of our collective love for Erika Johansen's debut novel The Queen of the Tearling, and our exaltations on its sequel, The Invasion of the Tearling, have only just begun.  Annie loved it, I certainly devoured it, and Library Journal gave it a star!

In a starred review to be in their March 15 issue, Library Journal says, "A bold storytelling choice makes this so much more fascinating than just a saga of warring kingdoms. Both Kelsea’s struggles in the Tear to protect her people and Lily’s narrative are completely gripping, and the anticipation of a revelation of how these two women are linked will keep readers turning the pages. It’s satisfying while leaving readers desperate for the next volume.”

See what all the fuss is about by downloading an egalley here.

-Amanda

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Recommended Reading: Balm by Dolen Perkins-Valdez

BalmThe New York Times bestselling author and winner of the Black Caucus First Novel Award for Wench returns to the Civil War era in Balm, a powerful story of love and healing about three people who struggle to overcome the pain of the past and define their own future.

The Civil War has ended, and Madge, Sadie, and Hemp have each come to Chicago in search of a new life. Born with magical hands, Madge has the power to discern others’ suffering, but she cannot heal her own damaged heart. Sadie can commune with the dead, but until she makes peace with her father, she, too, cannot fully engage her gift. Searching for his missing family, Hemp cannot receive redemption until he is reunited with those taken from him.

Beautiful in its historical atmosphere and emotional depth, Balm is a stirring novel of love, loss, hope, and reconciliation set during one of the most volatile periods in American history.  For fans of Valerie Martin’s Property and Tara Conklin’s House Girl.

Get your egalley here.

– Annie 

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If You Loved Girl on the Train, You Should Read This!

Kind Worth Killing

I promise you, lovely LLF readers, I had this blog post written and scheduled for today and then yesterday during Earlyword Galley Chat THE SAME TOPIC was discussed! How psychic is that???

Girl on the Train has been getting much deserved praise and crazy accolades for ages, but if you have read it and want something else to continue your relationship with unreliable, disturbed women surrounded by mysterious and dark circumstances, you should definitely read The Kind Worth Killing by Peter Swanson. IT IS STELLAR!

I love it! and so do some seriously rockstar librarians: 

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Have to say, this conversation made me smile and also think, sweet! I'm good at my job 🙂

READ IT NOW!

– Annie

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Get Your Medieval Court Intrigue Here: The Tudor Bride by Joanna Hickson

9780007446995_c87c7Fans of the television shows The Tudors, the CW's Reign, and the novels of Phillippa Gregory and Alison Weir, listen up!  If you can't get enough of Medieval period court dramas, intrigue, and romance, I hope you've already found your way to Joanna Hickson's The Agincourt Bridethe story of the genesis of the Tudor dynasty, now continued in The Tudor Bride, on sale today!

The Tudor Bride tells the story of Catherine de Valois, King Henry V’s new French Queen.  Even after an heir is born, Catherine is not safe from court intrigue when King Henry is struck down by fever, and enemies swarm to take power.  She must face removal from court life, separation from her child, new love, secrets, and mortal danger before all the dust settles.

The Tudor Bride makes its way to American shelves today, but you can also get a sneak peak at author Joanna Hickson's next novel, Red Rose, White Rose, by downloading an egalley here.  Enjoy!

-Amanda

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Bad Kid by David Crabb

Bad kidI am so tired of this cold, grey, snowy, sleety weather. Today I'm pretending it is 80 degrees and sunny, and I am sitting at the beach with the sun beating down, reading under an umbrella with an icy cold beverage. The book I have in my hand is called Bad Kid, and it's funny and poignant…the perfect mix of keeping it light but significant. 

Filled with the music and popular culture of the late-eighties and early-nineties (which is so my scene), this coming-of-age memoir from comedian and The Moth host David Crabb tells his story about growing up gay and Goth in San Antonio, Texas

He discusses how he realized (thanks George Michael!) what every bully already knew: he was gay; and then found a group of people with whom it was completely possible to be himself. A group of outlandish friends who reveled in being outsiders: goths.

David started wearing black, cutting class, staying out all night, drinking, tripping, chain-smoking, idolizing The Smiths, Pet Shop Boys, and Joy Division—and learning lessons about life and love along the way. His journey through adolescence is very universal and everyone will be able to relate to the overarching desire to figure yourself out. 

Get a galley now, and come pretend with me!

– Annie

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