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There's new books awaiting your perusal

On Feb. 4th, Border Regional Library in Virden had some new books to share with readers.
Library Stories

Fiction

The Good Son by Jacquelyn Mitchard. What do you do when the person you love best becomes unrecognizable to you? For Thea Demetriou, the answer is both simple and agonizing: you keep loving him somehow. Stefan was just seventeen when he went to prison for the drug-fueled murder of his girlfriend, Belinda. Three years later, he’s released to a world that refuses to let him move on. Belinda’s mother, once Thea’s good friend, galvanizes the community to rally against him to protest in her daughter’s memory. Meanwhile Thea struggles to understand her son. At times, he is still the sweet boy he has always been; at others, he is a young man tormented by guilt and almost broken by his time in prison. But as his efforts to make amends meet escalating resistance and threats, Thea suspects more forces are at play than just community outrage. And if there is so much she never knew about her own son, what other secrets has she yet to uncover—especially about the night Belinda died?

Short Stories

Seasonal Work by Laura Lippman. From 'The Everyday Housewife' to 'The Cougar', 'Tricks' to 'Snowflake Time', Laura Lippman's sharp and acerbic stories explore the contemporary world and the female experience through the prism of classic crime, where the stakes are always deadly. And in the collection's longest piece, the novella 'Just One More', she follows the trajectory of a married couple who, tired of re-watching 'Columbo' re-runs during lockdown, decide to join the same dating app.

Memoir

The Book of Malcolm by Fraser Sutherland. On the morning of Boxing Day 2009, the poet Fraser Sutherland and his wife, Alison, found their son, Malcolm, dead in his bedroom in their house. He was twenty-six and had died from a seizure of unknown cause. Malcolm had been living with schizophrenia since the age of seventeen. Fraser’s respectful narration of his son’s life — the boy’s happiness as well as his sufferings, his heroic efforts to calm his troubled mind, his readings, his writings, his experiments with religious thought. This is a master writer’s attempt to give his son’s life shape and dignity, to memorialize his life as more than an illness. And in writing his son’s life, Fraser creates his own self-effacing memoir — the memoir of a parent’s resilience through years of stressful care. Fraser Sutherland, one of Canada’s finest poetry critics and essayists, died shortly after completing this book.

Junior Fiction

Illustrated Stories of Mermaids edited by Usborne. Discover the mysterious selkies of the Scottish seas and the haunting Philippine tale of the curse of Sirena. Meet the merman from China whose tears turn to pearls and Hans Christian Anderson's brave little mermaid, pursuing her dream. These nine stories, beautifully illustrated and full of wonder, will whisk you from the bottom of the Arabian sea to rivers, deep in the Trinidadian rainforest.

 

More New Books

End of Days by Brad Taylor

Lightning in a Mirror by Jayne Ann Krentz

A Deadly Affair by Agatha Christie

Fear No Evil by James Patterson

Curse of Salem by Kay Hooper

The Nameless Ones by John Connolly

No One Wins Alone by Mark Messier

A Double Dose of Love by Kathleen Fuller

Minecraft: Guide to Combat

Dinosaurs by Brooke Vitale, illustrated by Lucy Barnard

I Want to Be an Engineer by Laura Driscoll, pictures by Catalina Echeverri

Spidey and his Amazing Friends: Superhero Hiccups

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