James by Percival Everett
Lin Salisbury Lin Salisbury

James by Percival Everett

Percival Everett elevates Twain’s story to a story that reveals the lived history of slaves. He empowers James with intelligence and language and agency. James is a hero who saves hs wife and hild and countless other slaves. A must read.

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Wandering Stars by Tommy Orange
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Wandering Stars by Tommy Orange

An unflinching look at epigenetics and generational trauma told throuh he one-hundred-sixty-year history of a Native American family who survive unwavering cruelty, indifference, and injustice.

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Same As it Ever Was by Claire Lombardo
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Same As it Ever Was by Claire Lombardo

Plagued by self-doubt, Julia Ames was an anxious and sometimes ambivalent mother. SAME AS IT EVER WAS is book about mothers — the good, the bad, and the ugly — and how as time marches forward, a mother can be all or any of those things. Lombardo writes with great affection and empathy for her characters.

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Whale Fall by Elizabeth O’Connor
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Whale Fall by Elizabeth O’Connor

A quietly reflective novel that deals with cultural differences and their interpretation — how those outside of a culture can misinterpret and assign meaning to things inappropriately.

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I Cheerfully Refuse by Leif Enger
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I Cheerfully Refuse by Leif Enger

Set in a not-so-distant dystopian future, Leif Enger’s forthcoming I CHEERFULLY REFUSE is a rollicking adventure story set on Lake Superior. It’s a big-hearted novel with an unlikely hero – protagonist Rainy embodies the empathy and compassion and motivation robbed of a society run by a wealthy and malevolent ruling class.

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Tastes Like War, A Memoir by Grace M. Cho
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Tastes Like War, A Memoir by Grace M. Cho

During those hours of cooking and eating together, her mother told her stories about her early childhood, a sad and lonely and often terrifying existence, and one that contributed to the manifestation of her schizophrenia later in life.

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The Gravity of Love by Brian Duren
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The Gravity of Love by Brian Duren

The GRAVITY OF LOVE is about grief and loss, but it’s also about love and redemption, about how we can go back and recover our lost selves. It’s a reminder that the love of one person can mend the heartbreak caused by another. It’s about resilience and creating a new life for yourself and the people you love.

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Iron Horse Cowgirls by Kate St. Vincent Vogl and Linda Back McKay
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Iron Horse Cowgirls by Kate St. Vincent Vogl and Linda Back McKay

Kate St. Vincent Vogl’s IRON HORSE COWGIRLS is the story of Louise Scherbyn and the women motorcyclists of the 1930s and 1940s. Co-written with friend and colleague, the late Linda Back McKay, Vogl amassed an encyclopedia’s worth of stories, facts, photos, and memories from newspapers, family members and friends, and the Women’s International Motorcycle Association archives.

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Two Roads Home by Daniel Finkelstein
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Two Roads Home by Daniel Finkelstein

British journalist Daniel Finkelstein’s memoir TWO ROADS HOME: Hitler, Stalin, and the miraculous survival of my family is the extraordinary story of survival.

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Granny Rex by Kurtis Scaletta
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Granny Rex by Kurtis Scaletta

Kurtis Scaletta's first picture book (illustrated fabulously by Nik Henderson) is a reminder that we are always a part of something bigger than ourselves. Young readers will love the bold and colorful illustrations by Henderson and will be comforted to know that they, too, have the strength and resources to claim their space in the world. An inspiring picture book for the timid and the tough. Highly recommended for holiday gifting (especially from a special grandmother.)

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A Winter’s Rime by Carol Dunbar
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A Winter’s Rime by Carol Dunbar

Dunbar has written a sensitive and studied story about generational trauma and it's effects. Dunbar's writing is evocative and lyrical. Her characters are complex and their relationships are conflicted. Yet, she does not turn to easy answers. And though things don't turn out as Mallory might have wished, in the end she finds salvation.

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