Monday, March 21, 2022

New Releases: April Edition

Check out these highly anticipated April releases featuring fiction and nonfiction titles. Click on the title to request a copy or get your name on the waitlist. Don’t forget to watch for more featured releases next month! 


Featured Fiction

Part of Your World by Abby Jimenez

Alexis was supposed to just have a fling with the cute carpenter ten years younger than her. When it starts to become more, she has to decide if she can turn her back on her wealthy family or follow her heart and bring Daniel into her world. 






Named after the patron saint of Glasgow, Mungo Hamilton is coming to realize that he is gay in a merciless city that demands conformity. At its core, Glasgow is a working-class town where the jobs have been replaced by rampant poverty and alcoholism. It’s an insular place where the people identify as either Protestant or Catholic and often express their fealty with violence and hatred. At its core, this is the story of Mungo’s coming-of-age in such an environment.



Ocean’s Eleven meets The Farewell in this lush, lyrical heist novel inspired by the true story of Chinese art vanishing from Western museums, about diaspora, the colonization of art, and the complexity of the Chinese American identity.







Featured Nonfiction

Oscar winner Viola Davis’s life story told in her own words. It is a moving and personal memoir of a global icon that will be sure to capture your heart.



Anxious by nature, Mary Laura Philpott has always prepared for the worst yet still managed to look at the bright side of life. Then, when her teenage son has a middle-of-the-night seizure and is diagnosed with epilepsy, Philpott’s sunny disposition turned dark: If this happened, what else could happen? Philpott’s memoir in essays is a balancing act of anxiety and optimism, showing both the dark and the light sides of life.


For the Indigenous people of the world, radical alteration of the planet, and of life itself, is a story that is many generations long. We Are the Middle of Forever places Indigenous voices at the center of conversations about today's environmental crisis.


No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.