Graveminder

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July Indie Picks

Indie Bound has chosen three stellar titles for their July Indie Picks list…and might I say, they have great taste.

9780062060556_0_Cover Before I Go to Sleep, S.J. Watson's debut novel, is getting rave reviews from librarians, and Booklist's starred review says: "It is both an affecting portrait of the profound impact of a debilitating illness and a pulse-pounding thriller whose outcome no one could predict.”

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I found Graveminder, Melissa Marr's first foray into adult literature, hard to put down (dinner, chores, meh – I need to finish the book!), and Library Journal's starred review sums it up perfectly, "Haunting, captivating, brilliant!”

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Ten Thousand Saints
 by Eleanor Henderson is another amazing debut novel about straightedge teenagers coming of age, fighting against established norms, and re-defining sex, drugs, and rock 'n' roll in 1980s New York.  I'm a bit of a sucker for NYC-centric books set between 1960-1990, so this is right up my alley.  

Indie Picks has chosen wisely, young grasshopper; you should definitely check out any/all of these titles.

-Annie

 

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Graveminder by Melissa Marr

Grave Check out the Publishers Weekly review of Melissa Marr's Graveminder, and be sure to click through to hear Kayleigh's book buzz over on Earlyword.

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YA bestseller Marr (Wicked Lovely), in her first novel for adult readers, serves up a quirky dark fantasy fashioned around the themes of fate, free will–and zombies. When Rebekkah Barrow is summoned home to Claysville for the funeral of her beloved grandmother Maylene, Rebekkah doesn't know that she's been designated Maylene's successor as the town Graveminder, whose job it is to give the recently deceased food to keep them in the Land of the Dead. Not coincidentally, her sometimes lover, Byron Montgomery, has just succeeded his dad as the Undertaker, who works intimately with the Graveminder. Even as the pair ponder the grave responsibilities that their weird destinies have thrust upon them, they doggedly pursue Daisha, an adolescent who died under suspicious circumstances and who, unburied and untended, is wreaking havoc around town as a rampaging member of the Hungry Dead. Not everything adds up in Marr's story, but the well-drawn characters and their dramatic interactions keep the tale loose and lively. 

 -Annie

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