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New Books at the Library

Adult bestseller: Hardcore Twenty-Four, a Stephanie Plum novel by Janet Evanovich: Stephanie has her hands full, especially with Simon Diggery and his pet boa, with Diesel's return to town, which neither Joe Morelli nor Ranger are pleased to see and
new books

Adult bestseller:

Hardcore Twenty-Four, a Stephanie Plum novel by Janet Evanovich: Stephanie has her hands full, especially with Simon Diggery and his pet boa, with Diesel's return to town, which neither Joe Morelli nor Ranger are pleased to see and Grandma Mazur's latest online paramour.

Count to Ten by James Patterson and Ashwin Sanghi: Santosh is ready to quit as the head of Private India but Jack Morgan, the global leader of Private, wants to open an office in Delhi and Santosh is the only person whom he can trust. The agency takes on a case that is very formidable.   

The House of Unexpected Sisters by Alexander McCall Smith: The new No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency novel. Precious Ramotse learns important lessons about first impressions and forgiveness. She and Mma Makutsi are approached by their part-time colleague Mr. Polopetsi, who has learned of a woman who has been wrongly dismissed from her job at a furniture store. She decides to investigate. 

Adult audio book:

Tell Tale: short stories by Jeffrey Archer; read by Robert Bathurst

Adult fiction:

Heather, the Totality by Matthew Weiner: Mark and Karen live their lives around their daughter Heather in Manhatttan luxury. She's beautiful, compassionate, entrancing and almost everyone agrees that she is a blessing except someone who was raised in poverty and violence. 

Adult inspirational:

In This Moment by Karen Kingsbury: The Baxter Family. Luke, a lawyer specializing in religious freedom cases, decides to stand up for Wendell, a public high school principal, who needs defending when he started an after school class, Raise the Bar. He lost the love of his life because of the program but is refusing to end the class. 

Adult non-fiction:

The Raftsmen by Ryan Barnett. On May 24, 1956, Henri Beaudout and his crew of three novice sailors launched from Halifax on a simple raft made from nine telephone poles, secured with two kilometres of rope. Their goal was to be the first to cross the treacherous North Atlantic by raft. They faced the brutal reality of life at sea and arrived in Falmouth, England on August 9, 1956, accompanied by their two faithful kittens that served as shipmates, barometers (when they raced to the cabin and hid, the sailors knew that nasty weather was coming), and confidantes, especially when the sailors needed reassuring and the benefits of purring.

Fire Canoes; steamboats on great Canadian rivers by Anthony Dalton.

Bluray:

The Music of Strangers with Yo-Yo Ma & The Silk Road Ensemble

Young adult:

90 Days of Different by Eric Walters

Junior fiction:

Ruby & Olivia by Rachel Hawkins

Junior picture book:  How to Find an Elephant by Kate Banks

Bizzy Mizz Lizzie by David Shannon

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