Hardcover Fiction:
1. The Fair-Weather Friend, by Jessie Garcia (signed copies)
2. This Is Where the Serpent Lives, by Daniyal Mueenuddin (signed copies)
3. The Correspondent, by Virginia Evans
4. Twelve Months V18, by Jim Butcher
5. The Hitch, by Sara Levine (signed copies)
6. Heart the Lover, by Lily King
7. Half His Age, by Jennette McCurdy
8. Departures, by Julian Barnes
9. Atmosphere, by Taylor Jenkins Reid
10. Anatomy of an Alibi by Ashley Elston
Jim Butcher returns with Twelve Months in his Harry Dresden series, urban fantasy about a professional wizard in Chicago. Both Booklist and Publishers Weekly had reviews, which seemed unusual for me for #18 in a series. From Booklist's starred write up: "Series fans will be intrigued by the new characters and changes in Harry's life as Butcher deftly explores the impacts of loss and grief." But PW warned new readers to not start with this book.
Hardcover Nonfiction:
1. Your Roots Don't Define You, by Chris Appleton
2. Attensity, by Friends of Attention
3. The Greatest Sentence Ever Written, by Walter Isaacson
4. Football, by Chuck Klosterman
5. Original Sins, by Eve L Ewing
6. Backlash Presidents, by Julia R Azari (Boswell Feb 16 event)
7. One Day Everyone Will Have Been Against This, by Omar El Akkad
8. 1929, by Andrew Ross Sorkin
9. Mother Mary Comes to Me, by Arundhati Roy
10. Dead and Alive, by Zadie Smith
Two great reads on Football from Chris and Jason. Jason said this is the first book he's read about football that reads like a book about baseball. They're different, he notes, and you can ask him to tell you more. BookMarks is two raves, a positive and a mixed. From Publishers Weekly: " Approaching the subject with rigor and drawing on his lifelong fascination with the game, Klosterman sheds light on football's "outsized and underrated" role in shaping contemporary culture. The result is a transcendent appraisal of America's favorite sport."
Paperback Fiction:
1. Theo of Golden, by Allen Levi
2. Heated Rivalry V2, by Rachel Reid
3. We the Animals, by Justin Torres
4. Passing, by Nella Larsen
5. Jane Eyre, by Charlotte Bronte
6. Tangerinn, by Emanuela Anechoum
7. The Book of Laughter and Forgetting, by Milan Kundera
8. Mockingbird Court V6, by Juneau Black
9. The Shred Sisters, by Betsy Lerner (Boswell-run book clubs)
10. When the Cranes Fly South, by Lisa Ridzén
Selling off the new paperback table is Tangerinn, by Emanuela Anechoum, translated from Italian by Lucy Rand, and winner of the Città di Lugnano Debut Novel Prize, the Mastercard Debut Novel Prize, and the Bancarella Select Prize. Mastercard has a literary prize? Three raves and two positives on BookMarks, including this from Joumana Khatib in The New York Times: "Tangerinn is the kind of story I hope to encounter more often. In a novel where almost every character is a migrant, changing countries is practically a fact of life. It sounds like being human."
Paperback Nonfiction:
1. How to Tell When We Will Die, by Johanna Hedva
2. How to Know a Person, by David Brooks
3. How the Other Half Eats, by Priya Fielding-Singh
4. Murdoku, by Manuel Garand
5. While You Were Out, by Meg Kissinger
6. The 388 Tattoos of Captain George..., by Amelia Klem Osterud (Boswell Feb 13 event-new date)
7. Don't Say Please, by Sahan Jayasuriya
8. Braiding Sweetgrass, by Robin Wall Kimmerer
9. The Name of This Band Is REM, by Peter Ames Carlin
10. Your Brain on Art, by Susan Magsamen and Ivy Ross
How to Tell When We Will Die: On Pain, Disability, and Doom is one of several books in our top ten that are current book club picks (and several that begin with "how") - it's the selection of the Cactus Book Club. Winner of the Amber Hollibaugh Award for LGBTQ+ Social Justice Writing, Michelle Tea on Hedva's book of essays: "A tremendous work of thought and feeling, packed with profound insight and illuminated throughout with a radical vulnerability that transmutes before your eyes into phenomenal power. Important and revelatory."
Books for Kids:
1. Peekaboo Love, by Camilla Reid, illustrations by Ingela P Arrhenius
2. We Are Black Americans board book, illustrated by Tequita Andrews
3. I Affirm Me, by Nyasha Williams, illustrated by Sóf'ya Glushkó
4. Where There Is Love, by Shauntay Grant, illustrated by Letícia Moreno
5. Knight Owl, by Christopher Denise
6. Wrong Friend, by Charise Mericle Harper and Rorey Lucey
7. Brown Sugar Baby Sweetest Love, by Kevin Lewis, illustrations by Jestenia Southerland
8. Busy Builders: Dinos at Work, by Stacie Bradly, illustrations by Damien Barlow
9. Dream Big Little One, by Vashti Harrison
10. Follow Your Dreams Little One, by Vashti Harrison
Selling off our new graphic novel and nonfiction display is Wrong Friend by Charise Mericle Harper and Rorey Lucey, from the authors of Bad Sister. From Kasey Swords in School Library Journal: "This graphic novel (editor's note - though it's really a memoir), perfect for fans of Raina Telgemeier and Shannon Hale, explores what happens when a BFF is no longer a forever friend...Featuring a tween girl's experience with friendships and personal discovery through the middle school years, this timeless book is a first purchase for all collections."
10. Your Brain on Art, by Susan Magsamen and Ivy Ross
How to Tell When We Will Die: On Pain, Disability, and Doom is one of several books in our top ten that are current book club picks (and several that begin with "how") - it's the selection of the Cactus Book Club. Winner of the Amber Hollibaugh Award for LGBTQ+ Social Justice Writing, Michelle Tea on Hedva's book of essays: "A tremendous work of thought and feeling, packed with profound insight and illuminated throughout with a radical vulnerability that transmutes before your eyes into phenomenal power. Important and revelatory."
Books for Kids:
1. Peekaboo Love, by Camilla Reid, illustrations by Ingela P Arrhenius
2. We Are Black Americans board book, illustrated by Tequita Andrews
3. I Affirm Me, by Nyasha Williams, illustrated by Sóf'ya Glushkó
4. Where There Is Love, by Shauntay Grant, illustrated by Letícia Moreno
5. Knight Owl, by Christopher Denise
6. Wrong Friend, by Charise Mericle Harper and Rorey Lucey
7. Brown Sugar Baby Sweetest Love, by Kevin Lewis, illustrations by Jestenia Southerland
8. Busy Builders: Dinos at Work, by Stacie Bradly, illustrations by Damien Barlow
9. Dream Big Little One, by Vashti Harrison
10. Follow Your Dreams Little One, by Vashti Harrison
Selling off our new graphic novel and nonfiction display is Wrong Friend by Charise Mericle Harper and Rorey Lucey, from the authors of Bad Sister. From Kasey Swords in School Library Journal: "This graphic novel (editor's note - though it's really a memoir), perfect for fans of Raina Telgemeier and Shannon Hale, explores what happens when a BFF is no longer a forever friend...Featuring a tween girl's experience with friendships and personal discovery through the middle school years, this timeless book is a first purchase for all collections."





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