• Until August

    Until August

    García Márquez, Gabriel

    Adult Fiction. “In a rediscovered novel…, Ana Magdalena Bach has been happily married for 27 years and has no reason to escape the life she has made with her husband and children. And yet, every August, she travels by ferry to the island where her mother is buried, and for one night takes a new lover. Across sultry Caribbean evenings full of salsa and boleros, lotharios and conmen, Ana journeys further each year into the hinterland of her desire and the fear hidden in her heart. Until August is a profound meditation on freedom, regret, self-transformation, and the mysteries of love—an unexpected gift…” Publisher description

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  • A Year of Last Things

    A Year of Last Things

    Ondaatje, Michael

    Adult Nonfiction (Poetry). “The dazzling latest by Ondaatje brings his formidable literary gifts and imagination to bear on questions of memory and artistic process. Tenderly plumbing friends, ex-lovers, works of art, and ‘echoing rivers where we lost and found ourselves,’ he writes of ‘all those small recalls of this and that/ before our walk up a staircase into the dark.’ Poetry offers a place ‘beyond the familiar properties’: ‘the breaking line's breath-like leap/ into the missed life// till there was no longer a story, only stillness/ or falling.’ This collection radiates the joy of a fully realized, literary life. ” Publishers Weekly

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  • Fourteen Days

    Fourteen Days

    Adult Fiction. “The tenants in a dilapidated apartment building on New York’s Lower East Side are going lockdown stir-crazy as COVID-19 rampages. The new super, lonely and worried about her ill father, finds refuge on the roof. Soon the renters join her, bringing up chairs and cocktails and telling stories. Putting a bold new twist on the plague novel, this bountiful, unpredictable, witty, and affecting tale-of-tales is… a collaboration by 36 exceptional writers, including Angie Cruz, Celeste Ng, Tommy Orange, Ishmael Reed, Hampton Sides, R.L. Stine…, and Meg Wolitzer.” Booklist

    Format: Book

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  • How to Win Friends and Influence Fungi

    How to Win Friends and Influence Fungi

    Adult Nonfiction. “In this rollicking collection, Balakrishnan and Wasowski—founders of the Nerd Nite series, in which experts present short, accessible science talks—bring together brief essays by scholars and others on such topics as ‘sex change and gender roles in anemonefishes,’ microbes' role in creating human body odor, and the feasibility of sci-fi artificial gravity systems. The broad range of topics ensures most readers will find something of interest, and the brisk pace will keep them glued to their seats. Playful yet enlightening, this entertains.” Publishers Weekly

    Format: Book

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  • The Kamogawa Food Detectives

    The Kamogawa Food Detectives

    Kashiwai, Hisashi

    Adult Fiction. “The Kamogawa Food Detectives is the first book in the bestselling, mouth-watering Japanese series… Down a quiet backstreet in Kyoto exists a very special restaurant. Run by Koishi Kamogawa and her father Nagare, the Kamogawa Diner serves up deliciously extravagant meals. But that's not the main reason customers stop by… The father-daughter duo are 'food detectives'. Through ingenious investigations, they are able to recreate dishes from a person's treasured memories - dishes that may well hold the keys to their forgotten past and future happiness.” Publisher description

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  • A Love Song for Ricki Wilde

    A Love Song for Ricki Wilde

    Williams, Tia

    Adult Fiction. “The novel begins in the present day, introducing 28-year-old vintage fashionista Ricki Wilde, the youngest in a high-achieving, high-society Atlanta family. She dreams instead of opening a flower shop—and through hard work… and a touch of fate, she’s able to move to Harlem and follow her dream. What begins as a simple romance is elevated by rich history as the story flashes back through Harlem’s past, revealing both its glamor and its danger. This vast time span creates an epic feel that never overpowers the tender heat of the romance. It’s a showstopper.” Publishers Weekly

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  • Misunderstood Vegetables

    Misunderstood Vegetables

    Selengut, Becky

    Adult Nonfiction. “Selengut (Good Fish) believes there is no such thing as a bad vegetable; there are just misunderstood ones. Writing with a dry sense of humor and a zesty enthusiasm, she plays matchmaker between 25 different wallflower vegetables—fava beans, nettles, fennel, beets—and shy cooks who have yet to discover their gastronomic potential. Gorgeous color photographs and bonuses such as a recipe for homemade ricotta (for the fava bean, sweet pea, and ricotta dip) round out this stellar cookbook.” Library Journal

    Format: Book

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  • The Other Significant Others

    The Other Significant Others

    Cohen, Rhaina

    Adult Nonfiction. “Cohen questions in her illuminating debut the notion ‘that a long-term monogamous romantic relationship is necessary for a normal, successful adulthood’ and considers what a life that prioritizes ‘devoted’ friendships might look like instead. According to Cohen, society is hard-pressed to understand friendships that in some ways supersede romantic relationships because they're a ‘provocation—unsettling the set of social tenets that circumscribe our intimate lives.’ It's a smart and heartfelt testament to the power of social bonds outside ‘compulsory couplehood.’ Kirkus

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  • Sun of Blood and Ruin

    Sun of Blood and Ruin

    Lares, Mariely

    Adult Fiction. “Lares makes a triumphant debut with a vivid epic set in an alternate 16th-century colonial Mexico. It stars a mestiza woman known variously by her Spanish name, Leonora; her Nahua name, Tecuani; and her alter ego, Pantera, a defender of Indigenous people who is magically able to transform into a panther and draw superhuman strength from the sun. As she joins forces with an alliance of Indigenous groups calling themselves La Justicia and aiming to fight back against Spanish control, the kinetic fight scenes and deep, complex interpersonal relationships will swiftly draw readers into her world.” Publishers Weekly

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  • Supercommunicators

    Supercommunicators

    Duhigg, Charles

    Adult Nonfiction. “Pulitzer winner Duhigg (The Power of Habit) contends in this savvy guide that ‘we can learn to connect in more meaningful ways if we can understand how conversations work.’ Duhigg provides wise advice for bonding with friends, fighting with partners, and bridging divides over such lightning-rod issues as gun control. In lucid prose, Duhigg breaks conversation down to its fundamentals, providing both an actionable guide and a revealing peek into the psychological needs and motivations that underpin human interaction.” Publishers Weekly

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    Availability: Available

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