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Born Standing Up
By Martin, Steve
"A thoroughly enjoyable and revelatory read, this memoir of Martin's early
days as a hard-working, budding comedian reminds us he was the originator
of a comedy style we now take for granted: absurd, ironic, and full of
non sequiturs. This book is yet more proof of Martin's incredible talent."
-- Marie du Vaure, Vroman's Bookstore, Pasadena, CA
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Gods Behaving Badly
By Phillips, Marie
"The gods of Greek mythology are living together in a shabby house in
London: Aphrodite's a phone-sex operator, Apollo is a TV psychic, Artemis
is a dog-walker, and Zeus is suffering from dementia. Things have definitely
gone downhill for the former inhabitants of Olympus. It takes a couple
of mortals to bring the gods back to fighting form in this funny, most
unusual novel." -- Barbara Hoagland, The King's English Bookshop,
Salt Lake City, UT
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The Art of the Snowflake:
A Photographic Album
By Libbrecht, Kenneth George
"Beautifully illustrated and full of the most interesting facts you'd
ever want to know about the delicate snowflake. Highly recommended."
-- Jennifer Lehman, Bloomsburg University Store, Bloomsburg, PA
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T Is for Trespass
By Grafton, Sue
"Just when you're thinking Grafton's Kinsey Millhone surely must be running
out of steam, you'll find yourself reading the whole darn 400 pages in
one sitting. Kinsey begins to suspect her elderly neighbor's new caregiver,
Solana Rojas, may not be the compassionate professional she appears to
be. Unfortunately, Kinsey and her landlord don't realize what a cunning,
evil foe Rojas really is." -- Karen Spengler, I Love A Mystery, Mission,
KS
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Remembering the Bones
By Itani, Frances
"Georgie is on her way to London for lunch with the queen, as one of 99 lucky Commonwealth residents born the same day as Elizabeth II. Her car slips off the road and she is trapped at the bottom of a ravine. As she wills herself to stay alive, she takes a poignant and comic journey through her 80 years, proving there is no such thing as an insignificant life." -- Marian Nielsen, Orinda Books, Orinda, CA
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The Redbreast
By Nesbo, Jo
"Norwegian detective Harry Hole is immersed in a mystery with roots in World War II in this brilliant evocation of how the tentacles of the past cling to the present, and are the true instigators of action. This powerful novel delves into the complexity of belief and collaboration, and rises above the genre." -- Bill Cusumano, Nicola's Books, Ann Arbor, MI
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Night Train to Lisbon
By Mercier, Pascal
"This novel taps into some of the oldest veins of story, the primal ones
of night journeys, of being stuck in place, yet adrift, and confused about
life's purpose. It is full of people who have lived, even as the fullness
of that is revealed only in the protagonist's drawing out of their stories.
I'm not sure how much this book might teach us how to live, but it has
reminded me of what it is to really read." -- Rick Simonson, The Elliott
Bay Book Company, Seattle, WA
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The Hearts of Horses
By Gloss, Molly
"Gloss does for our dreams of being horse-taming cowgirls what Sara Gruen
did for our dreams of running away with the circus -- making them wonderful
and real, while teaching us what it was like to live in America's recent
past. Martha Lessen dreams of living as a wandering cowboy -- but, then,
she is transformed by her love for the people and horses of an Oregon
ranch community. I loved this book." -- Andy Lillich, University of
Oregon Bookstore, Eugene, OR
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Someone Knows My Name
By Hill, Lawrence
"This book is astonishing for its compelling storyline: A young girl is stolen from her African homeland, enslaved in America in the mid-1700s, freed by the British during the Revolution, sent to Nova Scotia, returned to Sierra Leone, then brought to England to testify in the efforts to abolish slavery. An exciting introduction to a brilliant Canadian writer." -- Willard Williams, The Toadstool Bookshop, Peterborough, NH
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The Rowing Lesson
By Landsman, Anne
"At the bedside of her dying, irascible father, a daughter recreates his life in South Africa in language so fearless and original that it is startling. From fragments of memory emerges a vibrant, lyrical portrait of a man and a landscape." -- Mary Benham, Book Passage, Corte Madera, CA
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A Slave No More: Two Men Who Escaped to Freedom, Including Their Own Narratives of Emancipation
By Blight, David W.
"These narratives by former slaves Wallace Turnage and John Washington are gifts to 21st-century writers and historians. The power and rawness of the stories moved me. I appreciate those who preserved the narratives for us, and, also, Blight for bringing them out in such a wonderful way." -- Keri Holmes, The Kaleidoscope: Our Focus is You, Hampton, IA
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Them
By McCall, Nathan
"Barlowe Reed is a single, hardworking guy on the cusp of middle age.
In a twist on the neighborhood-busting and white flight of the 1950s and
'60s, his African-American neighborhood in Atlanta's Old Fourth Ward is
invaded by moneyed white folk. McCall brings the neighborhood to vivid
life in this entertaining, provocative first novel." -- Daniel Goldin,
Dickens Books Ltd. Harry W. Schwartz Bookshops, Milwaukee, WI
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Last Night at the
Lobster
By O'Nan, Stewart
"I'm a sucker for books that invite me into the world of someone trying
to live a decent life in difficult circumstances. Manny DeLeon is the
manager of a Red Lobster next to a rundown mall in snowy New England.
He and his staff know the restaurant will be shut down, but they need
to put on a good show for their customers -- and themselves -- one last
night, during a major blizzard. I highly recommend this gem of a book!"
-- Leslie Graham, DIESEL, A Bookstore, Oakland, CA
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Gentlemen of the Road:
A Tale of Adventure
By Chabon, Michael
"Once again, something entirely different from one of the country's most
respected writers. A swashbuckling, plot-twisting, soul-searching good
time." --Joe Foster, Maria's Bookshop, Durango, CO
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The Ghost: A Novel
By Harris, Robert
"I never thought about ghostwriting until I read this book, and now I'm
really intrigued. I like the way Harris blends ghostwriters' experiences
into the book and makes them real to a layperson. This political thriller
is a well-written, thought-provoking, and fun read." -- Ellie Joubert,
Bear Pond Books of Montpelier, Montpelier, VT
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Bless This Food: Ancient & Contemporary Graces from Around the World
By Butash, Adrian
"Not since Earth Prayers From Around the World have I seen such a wonderful collection of graces. The words come from many traditions, from cultures past and present, but they all find a way to say in heartwarming language, 'For this meal, for this company, for our gifts, thank you.'" -- Eric Robbins, Apple Valley Books, Winthrop, ME
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Die with Me
By Forbes, Elena
"A traditional police procedural brought to a higher level via interesting
detectives and a fiendish killer. When a string of suicides gets reclassified
as the work of a serial killer, Detective Tartaglia has to deal with a
demanding public, cautious administrators, and a tangled love life before
he can solve the case. I can't wait for the sequel." -- Laura Lucy,
White Birch Books, North Conway, NH
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Super America: Stories
By Panning, Anne
"This edgy collection is a wonder. You'll fall in love with Panning's
characters -- and be maddened by their heartlessness. She employs a variety
of settings, from a Mexican monastery to an Oregon Laundromat. 'Hillbillies'
exemplifies her skill and wit: It's up to the hillbillies who live next
to a custom-homes development to tell their new neighbors their homes
are sinking into the swamp they're built on."-- Archie Kutz, Lift Bridge
Book Shop, Brockport, NY
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The Lost Sailors
By Izzo, Jean-Claude
"Three men aboard an impounded freighter ponder their options, and their life choices. Like a classic French noir, this waterfront homage to Marseilles could have been written by Joseph Conrad and Albert Camus???great characters, great writing!" -- Nick DiMartino, University Book Store, Seattle, WA
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Small-Batch Baking: When Just Enough for 1 or 2...Is Just Enough!
By Nakos, Debby Maugans/ LaFrance, Laurie (Illus.)
"Go on, admit it. Now that the kids are out of the house, when you bake a cake, you eat the whole thing. Not all at once, but every time you pass by, you take a bite. Then you have to neaten up the edges. Soon, crumbs are the only evidence there ever was a cake. This book helps bakers avoid temptation, with recipes for small batches of everything from Bundt cakes to biscuits." -- Deb Hunter, Chicklet Books, Hillsborough, NJ
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