new releases

THE GHOST LAB

The author of A Libertarian Walks Into a Bear has written another droll account of oddball residents of New Hampshire, the land of living free or dying—and possibly contacting the living from the other side. The subjects of this book are a group of neighbors in Seacoast, on the relatively tiny New Hampshire shore who …

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THE GHOST LAB

The author of A Libertarian Walks Into a Bear has written another droll account of oddball residents of New Hampshire, the land of living free or dying—and possibly contacting the living from the other side. The subjects of this book are a group of neighbors in Seacoast, on the relatively tiny New Hampshire shore who …

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THE GARDEN JUST BEYOND

Fourteen-year-old Magnolia “Maggie” Gartner lives on the farm that’s been in her family for generations, ever since her tenth-great-grandfather, a Hessian soldier fighting for the British, settled in the New Jersey forests in 1776. He and his wife planted a linden tree that formed the heart of a magical garden. Pragmatic Maggie has meticulously chronicled …

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THE GARDEN JUST BEYOND

Fourteen-year-old Magnolia “Maggie” Gartner lives on the farm that’s been in her family for generations, ever since her tenth-great-grandfather, a Hessian soldier fighting for the British, settled in the New Jersey forests in 1776. He and his wife planted a linden tree that formed the heart of a magical garden. Pragmatic Maggie has meticulously chronicled …

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YET HERE I AM

Early on in his memoir, Capehart, best known as a commentator for MSNBC and as an editorial writer for the Washington Post, writes of being known among his Southern cousins as “Mr. Peabody,” the bookishly bespectacled cartoon dog. “And I was a little ‘funny,’” he adds. “That was the gentler f-bomb used for someone believed …

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YET HERE I AM

Early on in his memoir, Capehart, best known as a commentator for MSNBC and as an editorial writer for the Washington Post, writes of being known among his Southern cousins as “Mr. Peabody,” the bookishly bespectacled cartoon dog. “And I was a little ‘funny,’” he adds. “That was the gentler f-bomb used for someone believed …

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THE SKY WILL OVERTAKE YOU

Falk explores themes of transience, memory, and grief in this book of poems rooted in nature. In the opening entry, the speaker’s muse informs her that she is unnecessary because the sky is a “stunning event” whose ever-changing inspiration is more powerful than imagination. In “It,” the poet describes a fleeting but blissful moment of …

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Secrets at the Aviary Inn

Sophie Groenveld has finished her undergraduate studies in Toronto. She and her boyfriend, Marc-Antoine, are in York, England, a stop on their grand European tour. Sophie is here against her parents’ wishes, but she is on a mission. The only thing she knows about her mother’s background is that she was born and raised in …

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CASTAWAY ON THE ISLE OF DEVILS

Sixteen-year-old Alice Drinkard finally gets to share an adventure with her father. They’re leaving their London home for the New World, where his new business opportunity awaits. Alice is angry that her mother is joining them, as she’d tried marrying her daughter off to an older man despite Alice being smitten with someone else. There’s …

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TO WALK HUMBLY

It’s 1952, and a project of so-called “Urban Renewal” is in full swing in Bronzeville, Chicago’s predominantly Black neighborhood. With Jim Crow laws still in effect, the government is using the power of eminent domain to destroy the community, forcing families out of their homes. However, the novel’s plot centers mainly on a lost family …

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