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69 Books Found
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All the Single Ladies
By Rebecca TraisterThis thoughtful and comprehensive book traces the history of single women, their impact on the nation, and the joys and difficulties of being single. For those looking for an informative and engaging look at modern society. - Elizabeth Graham, Epiphany
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Big Swiss
By Jen BeaginAn unexpected queer page-turner in which a sex therapist's transcriptionist falls in love with a patient while living with a weed dealer in a 300-year old house full of bees. For fans of Milk Fed by Melissa Broder and My Education by Susan Choi. — Hal Shrieve, 53rd Street
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Bonaventure
By Saint BonaventureThis collection may serve the reader as a sort of “mysticism 101,” its major concern being the soul’s preparation for union with God. Bonaventure's thesis that through contemplating God through His Image we enter into our very selves would have a tremendous influence on the poet Dante, as well as other theologians which would follow him. - Andrew Fairweather, Seward Park
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The Book of the Unnamed Midwife
By Meg ElisonA plague decimates humanity, and the survivors are mostly men. A lone doctor walks the earth, trying to bring aid and comfort to the few women left. For those who like The Handmaid's Tale, Children of Men and 28 Days Later. Gripping and disturbing. — Isaiah Pittman, Inwood
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Broadway Butterfly
By Sara DivelloPower, greed, corruption...and murder. Read about the crime that gripped New York City in the 1920s and how justice can be difficult and elusive in the city's most mesmerizing case. Perfect for readers who enjoy Marie Benedict and Kate Quinn. - Tabrizia Jones, Pelham Parkway-Van Nest
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Burn the Negative
By Josh WinningFor fans of the Supernatural and Horror. The scariest movie ever made, The Guest House, has a deadly curse - its stars have all died except for child actor Laura. Now the movie is being remade into a series and the killings continue. Some projects are better left dead. - Thaddeus Krupo, Sedgwick
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Chronicle of a Death Foretold
In Colombia a young man of Arab descent is murdered because of a false accusation.The whole town is shocked by this crime. This short but deep novel makes you think about collective guilt, accountability and the vulnerability or victimization of ”the other”. - Wilsa Rhuma, SNFL
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The Covenant of Water
Lyrical, expansive, and immersive, this book pulls you into its universe right from the beginning. If you like sweeping family sagas and historical novels, you will treasure journeying into the world that Abraham Verghese brings to life. - Asha Unni, Stavros Niarchos Foundation Library
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Cursed Bunny
By Bora ChungNewly translated from Korean, these dreamlike stories are a fantastic blend of horror, science fiction, and folklore - with many of them focusing on bodily autonomy. For fans of Carmen Maria Machado and Franz Kafka. - Rachel Kahn, Seward Park
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The Deep Sky
By Yume KitaseiAn absolutely stunning novel with lush prose, a gripping mystery, and a diverse cast of characters. This book is perfect for fans of The Sparrow, and other science fiction with a potent emotional core. — Rae Shevchuk-Hill, Staten Island Bookmobile
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Diana: My Graphic Obsession
By Sivan Piatagorsky-RothA critical glimpse at the exploitation of Diana, Princess of Wales, and her life story. A great non-fiction graphic novel for those who enjoy deep dives into setting the record straight for maligned women of the past. - Rachel Crook, Stavros Niarchos Foundation Library
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Did you hear about Kitty Karr?
By Crystal Smith PaulKitty Karr is a woman who held power in front of and behind the camera of 1950s Hollywood. A power that enabled her to help others within the community she came from, but if found out , would cause her to lose everything. Similar to “The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo” by Taylor Jenkins Reid and “The Vanishing Half” by Brit Bennett - Evelyn Williams, Fort Washington
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Distant Star
By Roberto BolañoA stinging indictment of Augusto Pinochet’s military dictatorship that took over Chile in 1973, Bolaño’s story is a crucial warning about the cozy relationship between art, spectacle, and authoritarianism. - Julian Rivas, Sedgwick Library
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DOOM Guy: Life in First Person
By John RomeroJohn Romero is a legend in the gaming world, and this book is his story. Gamers and even nongamers will appreciate his professional account of his experiences in the industry. For those who are gamers or developers, this is a must-read. — Nicole Celic, Kingsbridge
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Drowning Practice
By Mike MeginnisA haunting take on the pre-apocalypse genre, Drowning Practice follows Lyd and her young daughter Mott on a surreal road trip across the decaying country. Lyd, carefully hiding Mott from her mysterious father while Mott struggles to write the great American novel before the world ends. - Grace Yamada, Grand Concourse
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Ella Baker and the Black Freedom Movement
By Barbara RansbyTracing the life and times of one of the most important activists of the 20th Century, Ransby’s biography of Ella Baker provides critical insight into the events that shaped the direction of the Civil Rights Movement. - Julian Rivas, Sedgwick Library
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Enchanted to Meet You
By Meg CabotParanormal romance girlies, rejoice! Meg Cabot is back with a sweet and hilarious enemies-to-lovers story featuring an old curse, a newer curse, a snarky teenage Chosen One, and really awful hail. - Kate Fais, Bloomingdale
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Enemies in Love
By Alexis ClarkThe true story of two people who should've been enemies, but enter into a forbidden romance instead. A truly moving story of finding love and connection in a racist world. - Renee Scott, Washington Heights
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Fingersmith
By Sarah WatersA Victorian tale of mystery and woe that is twists all the way down. Open it up and take the plunge! - Catherine Watson, Tottenville
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Flipping Boxcars
By Cedric KylesCedric the Entertainer’s first novel about a con man named Babe who likes to take chances rolling the dice. When a scam that seems too good to be true, falls apart, he has to find something better and bigger to put his hopes in. For fans of Colson Whitehead’s “ Harlem Shuffle”. - Evelyn Williams, Fort Washington
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Fugitive Telemetry
By Martha WellsThe sixth book in The Murderbot Diaries and the hits keep coming! It is amazing that a rogue, security android who is disgusted by humans could be such an endearing protagonist. You don’t have to read all of the books in the series, but why wouldn’t you? - Geoffrey Renaud, City Island
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Funny Feelings
By Tara DewittUp-and-coming comedian Farley swears that everything is platonic between her and her manager, former comedy star Meyer. However, when a new comedy tour requires the two to start fake dating for publicity, real feelings begin to bubble to the surface. A solid romance between two adults who, despite their witty bantering, only want the best for each other. - Vanessa Carrasco, 67th Street
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Gaudy Night
By Dorothy L. SayersHarriet Vane attends a reunion at her alma mater, the all-female Shrewsbury College, Oxford. The celebratory mood soon turns sour and Harriet must call in Wimsey to help her investigate. For fans of classic mysteries and dark academia. - Anne Rouyer, Mulberry Street
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The Gentle American
By Ismini Lamb and Christopher LambThe remarkable story of the US diplomat George Horton and the tumultuous Near East before, during and after the devastation of the cosmopolitan city of Smyrna in the 1920s, set against the backdrop of the crumbling Ottoman Empire. - Aspasia Katerinis, Battery Park City
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He Who Drowned the World
By Shelley Parker-ChanGreat for folks looking for an action-packed historical fantasy that features epic battles, endearing characters, and is a tremendous follow-up to Parker-Chan's debut. If you are looking for a grittier Mulan-inspired story, this is for you! - Urmi Rahman, Eastchester
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A Heart That Works
By Rob DelaneyAre grief memoirs supposed to be funny? Delaney's book chronicles the birth, illness, and death of his young son, Henry, with deep sadness, anger, tenderness, and, somehow, a sense of humor about it all. - Liz Baldwin, SNFL
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Hearthstone
By C.J. SansomSet in Tudor England, Matthew Shardlake, a lawyer for the Inns of Court, is summoned by Queen Catharine Parr to help a ward of the Court and the "monstrous wrongs" done against them and that's just for starters! This is an immersive historical mystery that builds slowly and is full of suspense. - Anne Rouyer, Mulberry Street
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Hello Beautiful
By Ann NapolitanoThis compelling story revolves around the lives of William Waters and the Padovano sisters. Written as a touching family saga, the chapters are dated and named after specific characters. This heartwarming novel will leave you wanting more when you reach the ending. - Florence Nicosia, Jerome Park
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A House Between Earth and the Moon
By Rebecca SchermHanging above an Earth ravaged by climate change, a galactic billionaire’s retreat gradually falls into chaos. An unsettlingly prescient vision of the world we might inhabit, this is a must-read for lovers of sci-fi and climate fiction. - Kristen Strmel, West New Brighton
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The Housekeepers
By Alex HayDowntown Abbey meets Ocean's 11 in this heist novel set in the heart of London's Mayfair neighborhood in 1905. The biggest party of the season is about to host the biggest heist of the new century! - Anne Rouyer, Mulberry Street
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Ikigai: the Japanese secret to a long and happy life
By Hector GarciaThe book is about traditional Japanese wisdom and ways to lead a happy and fulfilled life. - Wilsa Rhuma, SNFL
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In the Lives of Puppets
By TJ KluneThe perfect combination of sci-fi and the classic story of Pinocchio that will have you laughing and crying and wishing you had a group of robot friends with you everywhere you go! - Urmi Rahman, Eastchester
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Incomparable
By Brie and Nikki BellaThis inspiring tale of wrestling rockstar entrepreneurs will touch the hearts of many. Brie and Nikki are twins you want to hang out with (if Total Divas and their own show, Total Bellas didn't convince you enough.) — Nicole Celic, Kingsbridge
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Just as You Are
By Camille KelloggThis enemies-to-lovers retelling of Pride and Prejudice centers Liz, an employee at a failing online lesbian magazine and her new boss, the sexy, uptight Daria. For fans of One Last Stop and Read Between the Lines. - Reuben Gelley Newman, Stavros Niarchos Foundation Library
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Land of Milk and Honey
By C. Pam ZhangM.F.K. Fisher meets…Jeff VanderMeer? High atop an unnamed Alp with the planet’s only breathable air, an aimless chef is hired to cook lavish meals for a mysterious cabal of plutocrats who've got a taste for weird meats—what could go wrong? - Aidan Flax-Clark, LIVE from NYPL
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Land of the Dead
By Brian McDonaldDeath is an uncomfortable and rather difficult subject for many, but this book has great illustrations and presents different stories of how death is represented in various literature tales and cultural references. This will please readers who like to read literary stories and its thematic relations. - Linda Yau, SNFL
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The Last Miracle
By Ed KranepoolRecording his first Major League hit as a 17 year old (!!), Kranepool spent 18 years of his life suiting up for the New York Mets. An endearing memoir from a Flushing, Queens legend, one that fans of baseball, and New York as a whole, will enjoy. — Joe Pascullo, 53rd St
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Medusa's Sisters
By Lauren J.A. BearA vivid and moving reimagining of the Greek myth of Medusa and the sisters who loved her. - Aspasia Katerinis, Battery Park City
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Mister Magic
By Kiersten WhiteThis book is masterfully compelling, and a plot-driven chiller with a phenomenal ensemble cast. Perfect for fans of Stephen King's It, and lost-media horror in the vein of SyFy's Channel Zero. — Rae Shevchuk-Hill, Staten Island Bookmobile
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Monsters: A Fan’s Dilemma
By Claire DedererIs it possible to separate the art from the artist? By looking at popular artists of the last century, Dederer tries to offer a third choice - one that acknowledges the importance of both arguments. Because, apparently, we are all monsters. - Geoffrey Renaud, City Island
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Monstrilio
By Gerardo Sámano CórdovaIn this gothic literary horror, grief and sorrow quite literally take the form of something monstrous and terrifying, yet oddly tender. Both a modern spin on cautionary tales of folklore and a poetic exploration of very human characters. - Joey Leyko Picciotto, Stapleton Library
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My Dirty Duke
By Joanna ShupeViolet knows that her father's best friend, the Duke of Ravensthorpe, is the most powerful man in London with a reputation for sin. But nothing can stop Violet from wanting to shed her wallflower ways and fulfill her darkest, most forbidden desires... - Aspasia Katerinis, Battery Park City
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My Happy Marriage. 1
By Akumi AgitogiMiyo is the cast aside daughter in a middle-class family. She ends up engaged to Kiyoka, a man seeking a bride. This is a Cinderella-type story set in an alternate historical Japan. This will appeal to readers who wish to see happy endings for characters that have faced challenges. Readers of the manga Emma, and Snow White with Red Hair may enjoy this title. - Linda Yau, SNFL
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O, Caledonia!
By Elspeth BarkerMany works have been compared to that of Shirley Jackson, this might be the only one that really lives up to the comparison. Barker, like Jackson, has compassion for her misfit characters without protecting them from the tragedies of existing in an unkind world. Not since Stafford's Molly Fawcett has a child's interiority been written so credibly. - Olivia Ascione D'Elia, St. Agnes
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Perfectly Nice Neighbors
By Kia AbdullahThis twisty and socially relevant thriller asks readers a question: how far would you go to keep your family safe? You will rethink moving to the suburbs after picking this one up. For fans of Celeste Ng and Liane Moriarty. - Tabrizia Jones, Pelham Parkway-Van Nest
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Rameau's nephew, and D'Alembert's dream
By Denis DiderotThe comic tedium of Diderot's 'Rameau's Nephew' exposes polite convention of pre-revolutionary France as nothing but empty, spiritless convention, an inverted world wherein the scoundrel is the only honest figure, and the philosopher, a fool. Sure to give the reader a laugh, though at risk of a headache. - Andrew Fairweather, Seward Park
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Schiller. Volume one, The robbers ; Passion and politics
By Friedrich SchillerThis duo of early plays by Schiller includes 'The Robbers,' one of his most beloved, in large part due to the figure of Karl Moor, a sentimental young man who follows the law of his heart only to realize the moral structure of the world depends on a form of Justice greater than his own whim. - Andrew Fairweather, Seward Park
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Season of Skulls
By Charles StrossIf you're a fan of Lovecratian-esque office politics, Regency romances, and heroines who save themselves, you will absolutely love this bananapants genre mash-up by Charles Stross. - Kate Fais, Bloomingdale
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The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo
By Taylor Jenkins ReidA captivating story that recounts the life of a famous but reclusive bisexual actress during the Golden Age of Hollywood, and ends with a surprising twist. It's one of those compelling reads that will stay with you a long time afterwards. - Florence Nicosia, Jerome Park
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A Shot in the Dark
By Victoria LeeElisheva Cohen returns to NYC for art school a decade after getting kicked out of her Orthodox community. Her celebratory, steamy one-night stand at a queer club turns out to be a famous art legend (and her new professor)! - Alex Kohn, SNFL Teen Center
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Shubeik Lubeik
By Deena MohamadThis is a great story on the concept of what happens if wish making was possible in this world. This is a book with three distinct characters with three distinct wishes. There is much philosophical thought considered on the merits of making a wish and what sort of consequences can happen. Other read-alikes for this are graphic novel Eight Billion Genies and novel Before the Coffee Gets Cold. - Linda Yau, SNFL
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The Sound of a Wild Snail Eating
By Elisabeth Tova BaileyWhen a mysterious, debilitating illness shrinks her world, Tova Bailey finds herself small enough to enter, like Alice, into the tiny wonderworld of a snail she finds living in a potted plant brought to her by a well-wisher. Enchanting, insightful.- Catherine Watson, Tottenville
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The Sound of Light
By Sarah SundinIn WWII Denmark, Baron Henrik Ahlefeldt assumes the identity of a shipyard worker, rowing messages to Sweden for the Resistance. His life depends on keeping his secret hidden—a task that proves challenging when he meets American physicist Dr. Else Jensen. - Aspasia Katerinis, Battery Park City
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The Summer Hikaru Died
By MokumokurenHikaru goes missing for 6 months, and when he returns, his best friend Yoshiki needs to get to the bottom of the mystery of why he seems a far cry from his former self. Fans of both boys love manga and psychological horror will be in for a fun ride. — Joe Pascullo, 53rd St
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Sure, I'll Join Your Cult
By Maria BamfordIf you know Maria Bamford's standup, you know it is absolutely one-of-a-kind. This book is exactly the same: raw, unflinching, heartfelt, radically honest, and blurt-laugh hilarious. It is, in the best way possible, a memoir unlike any other. - Aidan Flax-Clark, LIVE from NYPL
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The Survivalists
By Kashana CauleyYou're probably thinking to yourself, "I could never become a doomsday prepper or a survivalist, that's just not who I am". This book is proof that when pushed into certain corners, yes you could. - Rachel Crook, SNFL
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Swamp Story
By Dave BarryDo you enjoy stories that have nonsensical plots that make sense in the end? Maybe throw in a fictitious monster, the everglades, and a cast of strange characters with fatal flaws? This rollicking read will leave you laughing. — Colin Vautrinot, Todt Hill-Westerleigh
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A Thousand Ships
By Natalie HaynesGoddesses and princesses, warriors and commoners: all come together to give the long unheard women of the Trojan War a voice. Fans of Greek myth won’t want to miss this fresh, uncompromising, and moving take on Homer’s famous epic. - Kristen Strmel, West New Brighton
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To Anyone Who Ever Asks
By Howard FishmanJust one listen to “How Sad, How Lovely” by Converse will have you wanting to know everything about the woman behind this singular and haunting voice. A biographical tale of family, artistry, and mystery set in the 1950s NYC music scene. - Isaac Sorrell, Hamilton Grange
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Treasure Island!!!
By Sara LevineJoin our unnamed narrator for a madcap experiment in boldness (and recklessness, and narcissism) as she adopts the classic novel Treasure Island as her roadmap to life. Laugh-out-loud funny with a strong undercurrent of darkness. - Eliza O'Connor, Harry Belafonte 115th Street
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Two Wars and a Wedding
By Lauren WilligA dramatic coming-of-age story with a dual timeline and a single heroine—a bold and adventuring young woman who finds herself caught up in two very different wars: the Greco-Turkish in 1896 and the Spanish-American in 1898. - Aspasia Katerinis, Battery Park City
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The Unnoticeables
By Robert BrockwayA unique blend of science fiction and extradimensional horror, featuring a new and different sort of conspiracy against humanity with a whip-smart liquor-and-leather aftertaste. Refreshingly original, punkishly irreverent and slapstick funny. — Isaiah Pittman, Inwood
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Vera Wong's Unsolicited Advice for Murderers
By Jesse Q. SutantoI enjoyed this charming, funny, and heartwarming book. The feisty Vera Wong is a fusion of the quirky Mr. Monk and the shrewd Ms. Marple. If you are looking for a quick read that is light-hearted and engaging, you can’t go wrong with this book! - Asha Unni, Stavros Niarchos Foundation Library
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Vexations
By Annelyse GelmanThis National Book Award-longlisted poetry collection cascades through motherhood, climate change, and the strangeness of living in the 21st century in "lush, orchestral text / A procession of violent images culminating in a fact." - Reuben Gelley Newman, Stavros Niarchos Foundation Library
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Victory City
By Salman RushdieIn 14th century India, a young girl is imbued with divine power and tasked with building a grand city. Equal parts epic and tragic, this centuries-spanning chronicle will stay with you long after the final page. - Kristen Strmel, West New Brighton
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What You Are Looking For Is in the Library
A heartwarming story about a community set in and around a small Tokyo library. Each chapter focuses on a new character and a careful reader will be rewarded by Aoyama's delicately woven story about ordinary people finding meaning in their lives. - Grace Yamada, Grand Concourse
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Where are Your Boys Tonight
By Chris PayneA fantastic deep dive into the explosion of emo and pop-punk music, told by those who lived it. - Alex Kohn, SNFL Teen Center
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White Cat, Black Dog
By Kelly LinkIn a world of brunch and airplanes, Link's stories prove that fairy tales can coexist with reality as we know it. Each short story is influenced by a classic fairy tale, and all of them find magic (and often hilarity) in unexpected places. -Rachel Kahn, Seward Park
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Y/N
By Esther YiStan culture gets a lyrical, surreal send-up from Esther Yi, whose debut tracks an unnamed narrator's intensifying obsession with a K-pop idol. Complex, dream-like, lush yet foreboding - for fans of Mona Awad and Ottessa Moshfegh. - Liz Baldwin, SNFL