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imageFrights and Delights: 60 Horror Titles To Thrill Readers | Horror Preview 2021
By Becky Spratford

Upcoming releases in the hottest genre of the moment feature exciting debuts, new work from established authors, and more women authors, editors, and publishers than ever.

 

imageRead-Alikes for The Cellist by Daniel Silva | LibraryReads
By Paulette Brooks, Elizabeth Eastin, and Julie Graham

The Cellist, by Daniel Silva (Harper), is the top holds title of the week (7/12/21). LibraryReads and Library Journal offer read-alikes for patrons waiting to read this buzziest book. Top spy Gabriel Allon returns for the 21st installment in Silva’s long-running series, featuring a tight-knit group of highly trained Israeli intelligence officers. This time, Allon and the team take on Russian billionaires, dirty money, and a threat to democracy.

 

SPONSORED BY SIMON & SCHUSTER
** PLEASE DESCRIBE THIS IMAGE ** Debut Author T. J. Newman Discusses Falling, Summer’s Most Anticipated Thriller

Hailed by Library Journal as “one of the year’s best thrillers,” Falling is already receiving rave reviews. It has received three starred reviews, including one from Library Journal, and is a LibraryReads pick for July. On Sale Now.

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image Prepub Alert
By Barbara Hoffert

imageSneak Peek: Margaret Atwood’s Burning Questions
By Barbara Hoffert

Atwood asks sharp, smart, punch-it-to-us questions in this essay collection, selected from published works that bring us right up to the pandemic.

 

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imageSpotlight: Sequoia Nagamatsu’s How High We Go in the Dark
By Barbara Hoffert

A product of more than 10 years’ labor, this novel will ring out sharply in today’s pandemic world. In 2030, archaeologists troweling through the Arctic Circle’s melting permafrost discover the well-preserved remains of a girl who evidently died of an ancient virus. The plague thus unleashed harries generations, as people find new ways to mourn. 

 

image Things Have Gotten Worse Since We Last Spoke | Featured Horror Review
By Emily Vinci
"A must-read for fans of body horror, epistolary novels, and depravity, this pulse-pounding novella is one that readers will surely devour in one sitting."
image Two-Way Mirror | Featured Literature Review
By Asa Drake
"Outlining a liminal space informed by gender, class, and disability, Sampson renders a modern portrait of Barrett Browning as a feminist who was presciently aware of the importance of her own image. The book draws on a range of primary sources and includes photographs of the poet and her family. A welcome update that avoids sensationalism to pursue a more complex history of a much-loved literary figure. Recommended for all collections."
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