Jon McGregor's new novel follows an expedition guide who suffers a stroke in the middle of an Antarctic ice storm and loses the ability to speak — and the people around him at a loss for what to say.
(Image credit: Catapult)
In The Trees, Everett revisits the 1955 murder of Emmett Till, imagining a series of similar killings in the same small Mississippi town. Mixing horror, humor and insight, it's impossible to put down.
(Image credit: Graywolf)
Powers climbs down from the treetops of The Overstory in his latest novel, to tell the story of a widowed father and his troubled son who head into the wilderness to try to figure out their lives.
(Image credit: W.W. Norton & Company)
R.C. Sherriff's recently reissued 1931 novel, which follows a British family on their two-week holiday, is a reflection on how time changes shape in periods like a vacation — or even a pandemic.
(Image credit: Simon & Schuster)
UnCovered
review by Shannon Carmen, ACLS Egg Harbor City Branch
If you love twisted fairy tales you should definitely read Curses by Lish McBride. It is twisted retelling of Beauty and the Beast and, in my opinion, much better than the original. Merit Craven became the beast because she wouldn’t fulfill her obligation of marrying a man more her mother’s age. She can only break the spell by finding true love or getting married by a man of her mom’s choosing by her 18th birthday. Merit ends up meeting Tevin (Beauty) and they form a plan to find a suitable husband to break her curse. It’s a quirky, quick read that is lighthearted and fun.
If you like twisted fairy tales like me, there will be a “Twisted Fairy Tales” display in October 2021 at the ACLS Egg Harbor City Branch.
The atmosphere throughout this account is foreboding, darkened by the shadow COVID-19 cast over the country but also by the dangers to democracy the authors perceive and depict.
(Image credit: Simon & Schuster)
Michelle Quach's immensely lovable YA debut Not Here to Be Liked centers on Eliza, who's just been done out of her dream job as editor of the high school paper by an unqualified but very charming boy.
(Image credit: Katherine Tegen Books)