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News of the World by Paulette Jiles
Paulette Jiles vividly brings to life the lawless Texas frontier of the 1870s and juxtaposes it against the noble Captain and his touching relationship with Joanna. You will want to read it through in one sitting but spare your nerves. There are gunfights and outlaws and villains aplenty in NEWS OF THE WORLD, but you will be heartened by the spirited duo that traverse the four-hundred-mile journey together to find their place in the world.
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Water and What We Know by Karen Babine
Babine’s grandfather served in the Coast Guard, an unlikely choice for a landlocked kid raised on a farm in southwestern Minnesota, and one that his family disparaged – the land being solid, and the water less so. Perhaps that is his legacy: a legacy of water. Babine’s emotional home is her grandparents’ cabin on Third Crow Wing Lake, where she spent time each summer. She grew up in Northern Minnesota, three blocks from Lake Belle Taine, learning to swim in the frigid June waters. She spent every last day of elementary school at the Headwaters of the Mississippi, skillfully climbing over slippery rocks. She took school trips to Duluth, where she learned about the power of the lake to take down ships. She marvels at the weight of a bucket of water – forty pounds – so heavy for something so clear.
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Gichi Bitobig, Grand Marais by Timothy Cochrane
In a well-researched volume, Timothy Cochrane brings to life the hardships and heartbreaks of the Anishinaabeg and their new neighbors from the American Fur Company as they navigate the changing landscape of the fur trade in Grand Marais from 1823-1825.
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The Tattooist of Auschwitz by Heather Morris
The horrors of Auschwitz are all here: the sadistic and heartless guards, the gas chambers and crematoriums, the unending cattle cars delivering unbelievable numbers of people, and of course Josef Mengele, infamous for his inhumane medical experimentation on camp prisoners. In spite of these horrors, the story of Lale and Gita Sokolov has something else – something that no one, not Mengele, not an SS officer, not even death, could take from them—love. Lale’s courage, determination, and unflagging hope are inspirational.
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Broken Ice by Matt Goldman
As an Emmy-award winning writer for Seinfeld and the Ellen Show, Goldman has an ear for dialogue. His comedic roots show through in the banter between Nils and his partner Ellegaard. He’s created some memorable characters in addition to Nils and Ellegaard: Jameson, a former Canadian football player cum nurse practitioner, is hired by Nils’ ex-wife Micaela to dress Nils’ wounds – and he offers some comedic relief in some of the more tense moments of the investigation.
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Nothing to Envy: Ordinary Lives in North Korea by Barbara Demick
The North Korean’s in Barbara Demick’s 2009 Nothing to Envy call themselves “frogs in a well” referring to a third-century Tao parable in which the frog at the bottom of the well is perfectly happy living in his dank and dark pit until he meets a sea turtle that tells him of the glories of the ocean. Nothing to Envy chronicles the lives of six defectors: a kindergarten teacher, a university student, a middle-aged factory worker and her daughter, a pediatrician, and an orphan from Chongjin, an industrial and mining center in the north.
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Virgil Wander by Leif Enger
Virgil Wander is a story filled with tall tales and quiet ambition and reminded me of the Tim Burton movie, The Big Fish. If you’re a fan of magical realism, second chances, and the power of stories, check out Virgil Wander at your favorite bookstore or library.
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Desolation Mountain by William Kent Krueger
Krueger takes a poke at corporate money and politics, as well as mining and the environment. There is action, adventure, and suspense, but woven throughout is a deeper, quieter message: one about family and nature and how closely we are connected to each other and the earth.
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Leave No Trace by Mindy Mejia
Using the evocative backdrop of the Boundary Waters wilderness, Mejia explores the myriad of ways we can become lost – physically, emotionally, and psychologically. She expertly weaves together the back stories of Maya and Lucas to an electrifying and ultimately satisfying conclusion. Mejia’s characters are real – flawed and messy, with complicated families and punk-dyed hair. They make choices that leave you clawing at the air, wishing you could pull them back from the cliff . . . and in the Boundary Waters, there are plenty of cliffs.
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Pachinko by Min Jin Lee
Pachinko is a story for our times – the story of a family that rises above the limitations placed upon them by people and governments, to make not only a home, but a life.
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Old in Art School by Nell Painter
Painter is a dreamer and a realist. Anyone who has ever had a dream deferred, anyone who appreciates art or wants to learn more about art, will enjoy Painter’s memoir, Old in Art School.
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Educated: A Memoir by Tara Westover
In Tara Westover's Educated, A Memoir, she recounts her fundamentalist Mormon upbringing in the shadow of Buck's Peak in Idaho. She grew up hearing stories of families being gunned down by federal agents, and her father's proselytizing about the impending end of the world.
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Laurentian Divide by Sarah Stonich
As always, Stonich’s descriptions of the landscape are richly drawn and imbued with the scents, sounds, and sights of the northern Minnesota landscape. She is at the height of her powers in describing a rent in the Divide where Alpo escapes to fish one last time before his wedding: “The cavern opens to a dank bowl of low wetland anchored with hooked cedars. One end of the pool spills down into it, a sheet of water the width of a car. It foams upon impact but settles smooth a few yards into its course. Where the stream meets a boulder, it splits neatly in two to flow in opposite directions.”
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Warlight by Michael Ondaatje
In Warlight, Ondaatje examines a theme that occurs throughout much of his body of work – “The lost sequence in a life,” he writes, “Is the thing we always search out.” He reminds us that often it is only through the refracted lens of adulthood, that we can truly understand the past.
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I Am I Am I Am by Maggie O’Farrell
O’Farrell’s point is clear. Any of us could be one breath away from dying, and it is in recognizing this, that Maggie O’Farrell has learned to appreciate living – breath by breath, moment by moment, day by day. And after her daughter survives yet another brush with death, she whispers, She is, she is, she is.
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Diary of a Bookseller by Shaun Bythell
Bythell clearly has a dry sense of humor, and in his business, he needs it. If you’re a bookseller or a former bookseller, or have ever wondered what it would be like to be a bookseller – or even if you are just a book lover, you’ll enjoy The Diary of a Bookseller.
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Like to Die by David Housewright
Rushmore McKenzie is back in David Housewright’s LIKE TO DIE, the fifteenth in the series. Fans will find no surprises here -- true to form, there’s humor, conflict, action, sexual tension and finally resolution.
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Once in a Blue Moon Lodge by Lorna Landvik
Lorna has a gift for creating memorable characters in gorgeous landscapes. We've waited a long time for this sequel to Patty Jane's House of Curl. Once in a Blue Moon Lodge was a guilty pleasure -- like tasting a favorite childhood dish after a long time away. Ione, Patty Jane, and Nora weave together a rag tag family forged by time and love lost and found.
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Love and Ruin by Paula McLain
Paula McLain is one of my favorite authors of historical fiction because she carefully researches her subjects and characters. Circling the Sun -- about the life of horse trainer and aviator Beryl Markham was one of my favorites, but now with Love and Ruin, she has fleshed out the life of another strong female, Martha Gellhorn. I can't wait to read her next book!