“What’s the Story?”
is a KRSH Radio podcast
Hosted by Joy Lanzendorfer and
co-sponsored by the Sonoma County Library
Listen to "What’s the Story"
Past What's the Story selections for
Current Podcast January to December, 2020
Selection for December 14
Dreaming of You
by Melissa Lozada-Oliva
A macabre love story in verse about celebrity, loss, and longing following a poet who resurrects pop star Selena from the dead.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
To Selena, With Love
by Chris Perez
The murdered Mexican singer's husband shares his recollections and memories of their relationship, both personal and professional, and clarifies certain misconceptions about her life and death.
Edge Case
by YZ Chin
When her husband suddenly disappears, a young woman must uncover where he went, and who she might be without him, in this striking debut of immigration, identity, and marriage.
Love, Dishonor, Marry, Die, Cherish, Perish
by David Rakoff
Enjoy novels in verse? Here's another one by the late NPR commentator and essayist David Rakoff. This story traverses the experiences of characters linked by acts of generosity and cruelty throughout major historical events of the 20th century.
Heartland
by Ana Simo
Taking place in an alternate, pre-apocalyptic United States, this is the uproarious story of a thwarted writer’s elaborate revenge on the woman who stole her lover, blending elements of telenovela, pulp noir, and dystopian satire.
When We Make It
by Elisabet Velasquez
Sarai uses verse to navigate the strain of family traumas and the systemic pressures of toxic masculinity and housing insecurity in a rapidly gentrifying Brooklyn, questioning the society around her, her Boricua identity, and the life she lives.
Peluda
by Melissa Lozada-Oliva
A collection of poems that explores the relationship between femininity and body hair as well as the intersections of family, class, the immigrant experience, Latina identity, and much more.
Who Was Selena
by Kate Bizantz
Discover why Selena, the Queen of Tejano music, became one of the most celebrated Mexican-American entertainers of the 20th century.
Selection for December 7
She-Wolves
The Women Who Ruled England Before Elizabeth
by Helen Castor
Prize-winning historian Helen Castor delivers a compelling, eye-opening examination of women and power in England, witnessed through the lives of six women who exercised power against all odds – and one who never got the chance.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
Modern HERstory
Stories of Women and Nonbinary People Rewriting History
by Blair Imani
From the women’s movement to Black Lives Matter, these trailblazers come from backgrounds and communities that are traditionally overlooked despite making huge contributions to the social change movements of the last century: not just women, but people of color, queer people, trans people, Muslims, and young people.
The Real Valkyrie
The Hidden History of Viking Warrior Women
by Nancy Marie Brown
In 2017, DNA tests revealed to the collective shock of many scholars that a Viking warrior in a high-status grave in Birka, Sweden was actually a woman. The Real Valkyrie weaves together archaeology, history, and literature to imagine her life and times, showing that Viking women had more power and agency than historians have imagined.
Daughters of the Winter Queen
Four Remarkable Sisters, the Crown of Bohemia, and the Enduring Legacy of Mary, Queen of Scots
by Nancy Bazelon Goldstone
From the great courts, glittering palaces, and war-ravaged battlefields of the 17th Century comes the story of four spirited sisters and their glamorous mother, Elizabeth Stuart, granddaughter of the martyred Mary, Queen of Scots.
Women of the American Revolution
Where were women during the American Revolution? Helping to run it, of course. This video lecture discusses the important role that women played during this piece of history.
(DVD)
The Autumn Throne
by Elizabeth Chadwick
The stunning conclusion to the Eleanor of Aquitaine historical fiction trilogy. Imprisoned by her husband, separated from her children – if King Henry II thought these things would push his queen into submission, he was wrong. Freed by his death, she became dowager Queen of England. Her indomitable spirit would be tested as she attempted to keep the peace between her warring sons, fend off enemies, and negotiate a magnificent future for a chosen granddaughter.
The Last Tudor
by Philippa Gregory
Reimagines the lives of Lady Jane Grey and her two sisters, who respectively endure imprisonment, a secret marriage and marginalization under the suspicious eyes of Tudor queens Mary and Elizabeth.
(Print book, large type book, eBook, eAudiobook, book on CD)
My Contrary Mary
by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton, and Jodi Meadows
Mary is the queen of Scotland and the jewel of the French court. Except when she’s a mouse. Yes, reader, Mary is a shapeshifter in a kingdom where Verities rule. It’s a secret that could cost her a head – or a tail. Luckily, Mary has a confidant in her betrothed, Francis. Thrust onto the throne, Mary and Francis face a viper’s nest of conspiracies, traps, and treason. And if Mary’s secret is revealed, heads are bound to roll.
African Icons
Ten People Who Shaped History
by Tracey Baptiste
Black history began long ago with the many cultures and people of the African continent. Meet 10 real-life kings, queens, inventors, scholars, and visionaries who lived in Africa thousands of years ago and changed the world.
Matilde
la primera médica mexicana
por Carlos Pascual
La novela de Carlos Pascual, de fenomenal destreza literaria, rescata la figura e importancia de Matilde Montoya, quien luchó con su incuestionable ejemplo por que se escuchara la voz de miles de mujeres acalladas por razones tan vagas como la tradición o el decoro.
Selection for November 30
Salad Days
by Frances Badalamenti
Vacillates between youth-driven cultures of mid-90s-era Jersey and early aughts Portland. As the dual story unfolds, we witness the 20-something protagonist, Ana, as she takes a crack at being an adult, navigating friendships and searching for intimate relationships, maintaining jobs and managing money.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
Another Brooklyn
by Jacqueline Woodson
August is 35 the year she returns to Brooklyn to bury her father, and a chance encounter with a friend in her old neighborhood prompts a flood of memories from her youth. Her memories explore what it was like to be an African-American girl (and teen) in the 1970s, what possibilities existed – and what challenges. This tale of friendship, love, and loss cuts back and forth through time.
Educated
by Tara Westover
Traces the author's experiences as a child born to religious survivalists in the mountains of Idaho, describing her participation in her family's paranoid stockpiling activities and her resolve to educate herself well enough to earn an acceptance into a prestigious university and the unfamiliar world beyond.
(Print book, large type book, eBook, book on CD, eAudiobook, Playaway)
The Girl Who Fell From the Sky
by Heidi Durrow
After a family tragedy orphans her, Rachel, the daughter of a Danish mother and a Black American soldier, moves into her grandmother’s mostly black community in the 1980s, where she must swallow her grief and confront her identity as a biracial woman in a world that wants to see her as either black or white.
Welcome to the Goddamn Ice Cube
by Blair Braverman
A revelatory memoir of the author’s efforts to develop the strength and resilience to survive in the demanding landscapes of Norway and Alaska.
Serving the Servant
by Danny Goldberg
Looking past the angst and depression, Goldberg explores Cobain’s brilliance in every aspect of rock and roll, his compassion, his ambition, and the legacy he wrought.
A Song Below Water
by Bethany Morrow
In a society determined to keep her under lock and key, Tavia must hide her siren powers. Meanwhile, Effie is fighting her own family struggles, pitted against literal demons from her past. Everything changes in the aftermath of a siren murder trial that rocks the nation. Soon, nothing in Portland, Oregon, seems safe.
Juliet Takes a Breath
by Gabby Rivera
Juliet Milagros Palante is leaving the Bronx and headed to Portland. She just came out to her family and isn’t sure if her mom will ever speak to her again. But Juliet has a plan, sort of, one that’s going to help her figure out this whole “Puerto Rican lesbian” thing.
Ways to Make Sunshine
by Renée Watson
The Hart family of Portland, Oregon, faces many setbacks after Ryan’s father loses his job, but no matter what, Ryan tries to bring sunshine to her loved ones.
Selection for November 16
Orwell’s Roses
by Rebecca Solnit
Journeying to the cottage in Wallingford where author George Orwell lived in 1936, the author examines his desire to be agrarian and settled, how gardening restored him, and how planting something can be an act of fidelity and faith.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
1984
by George Orwell
Portrays life in a future time when a totalitarian government watches over all citizens and directs all activities.
(Print book (English and Spanish), large type book, book on CD, eBook, eAudiobook)
1Q84
by Haruki Murakami
An ode to Orwell’s 1984 told in alternating male and female voices relates the stories of Aomame, an assassin for a secret organization who discovers that she has been transported to an alternate reality, and Tengo, a mathematics lecturer and novice writer.
The Last Man in Europe
by Dennis Glover
Simultaneously a captivating drama, a unique literary excavation and an unflinching portrait of a beloved British writer, this novel will change the way you understand the book 1984.
George Orwell and Totalitarian Dystopia
(Great Courses Streaming
Video via Kanopy)
Orwell’s 1984 has created a vocabulary of ideas we continue to use in political discourse today. Trace the ways Orwell uses language to shape his dystopic vision and the way it both reflects and distorts reality. (31 minutes)
Practical Rose Gardening
by Inger Palmstierna
Provides instruction on selecting, growing, and caring for roses, and offers guidance on mixing roses with companion plants in flowerbeds with advice on color choice and rose varieties.
Down and Out in Paris and London
by George Orwell
Orwell’s account of his salad days as a penniless British writer in the early 1930s contains a good deal of autobiography, no self-pity, and much humor.
George Orwell
A Life
by Bernard Crick
Originally published in 1980, this was the first biography written with the cooperation of Orwell’s widow. It was immediately lauded for its wealth of detail and shrewd analysis of Orwell’s life, literature, and politics.
Feed
by M.T. Anderson
In this chilling novel, Anderson imagines a society dominated by the feed, a next-generation internet/television hybrid that is directly hardwired into the brain.
Selection for November 9, 2021
A Salad Only the Devil Would Eat
by Charles Hood
In these wry and explosively funny essays, nature obsessive Charles Hood reveals his abiding affection for the overlooked and undervalued parts of the natural world.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
A Californian's Guide to the Mammals Among Us
by Charles Hood
Full-color images and evocative descriptions make this identification guide to over 40 varieties of the Golden State's fascinating warm-blooded wildlife fun and intuitive.
All the Wild that Remains
by David Gessner
Archetypal wild man Edward Abbey and proper, dedicated Wallace Stegner left their footprints all over the western landscape. Now, nature writer David Gessner follows the ghosts of these two remarkable writer-environmentalists, braiding their stories and asking how they speak to the lives of all those who care about the West.
The Best American Travel Writing 2021
by Padma Lakshmi
From the lively music of West Africa, to the rich culinary traditions of Muslims in Northwest China, to the thrill of a hunt in Alaska, this collection is a treasure trove of diverse places and cultures, providing the comfort, excitement, and joy of feeling elsewhere.
The Truth and Other Stories
by Stanislaw Lem
Twelve short stories by science fiction master Stanisław Lem. Many of the stories feature artificial intelligences or artificial life forms, long a Lem preoccupation; some feature quite insane theories of cosmology or evolution. All are thought provoking and scathingly funny.
Something Rotten
A Fresh Look at Roadkill
by Heather Montgomery
When Heather Montgomery sees a rattlesnake flattened on the side of the road, her first instinct is to pick it up and dissect it. She's always wanted to see how a snake's fangs retract when they close their mouths, and it's not exactly safe to poke around in a live reptile's mouth. Her fascination with roadkill sets her off on a journey from her own backyard and the roadways of the American South to scientists and kids in labs and homes across the globe.
Unicorn Food
by Kat Odell
Kat Odell celebrates healthy, vibrant unicorn food with a kaleidoscope of 75 recipes. This is health food as never seen before, filled with joy, and in all the colors of the rainbow.
Lunes sin carne
por Raquel Bernácer
Lunes sin Carne es una interesante iniciativa para aquellas personas que quieren empezar a comer más sano, aumentando el consumo de vegetales y reduciendo el de alimentos de origen animal.
Cocinar cero residuos
por Giovanna Torrico
Con algunas acciones sencillas y un poco de organización, serás más eficaz, cocinarás mejor y reducirás tus residuos alimentarios. Cocinar bien no consiste solo en seguir una receta. También es aprender a utilizar mejor los alimentos, tanto si se trata de una carcasa de pollo como de las sobras del asado o las hojas de remolacha, las cuales tiras sistemáticamente (o pides en la frutería que las corten).
Selection for November 2
On Animals
by Susan Orlean
These stories consider a range of creatures, the household pets we dote on, the animals we raise to end up as meat on our plates, the creatures who could eat us for dinner, the various tamed and untamed animals we share our planet with who are central to human life.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
How to be a Good Creature
A Memoir in Thirteen Animals
by Sy Montgomery
With plenty of heart, acclaimed naturalist Montgomery makes the convincing case that all animals—great and small—can teach us compassion.
(Print book, large type book, eBook, eAudiobook, book on CD)
H is for Hawk
by Helen Macdonald
In this elegant synthesis of memoir and literary sleuthing, an English academic finds that training a young goshawk helps her through her grief over the death of her father.
(Print book, large type book, eBook, eAudiobook, book on CD)
Once There Were Wolves
by Charlotte McConaghy
Inti Flynn arrives in Scotland to lead a team of biologists tasked with reintroducing 14 gray wolves into the remote Highlands. As the wolves surprise everyone by thriving, Inti begins to let her guard down. But when a farmer is mauled to death, Inti knows where the town will lay blame. Unable to accept her wolves could be responsible, Inti makes a reckless decision to protect them. But if the wolves didn’t make the kill, then is something more sinister at play?
Pets and Their Famous Humans
by Ana Gallo
In this charmingly illustrated collection of pet-related stories children will find out about some of history's most important scientists, artists, writers, and musicians and their beloved animals.
When Dogs Heal
Powerful Stories of People Living with HIV and the Dogs That Saved Them
by Jesse Freidin
A beautiful, unique collection of full-color portraits and personal accounts of love, connection, and survival, showcasing HIV-positive people who are thriving and celebrating life, thanks to the compassion and unconditional love of their dogs.
No se permiten elefantes
por Lisa Mantchev
Hoy es día del club de las mascotas. Habrá gatos y perros y peces, pero no se permiten elefantes. El club de las mascotas no entiende que las mascotas pueden ser de todos los tamaños y las formas, al igual que los amigos. Ahora llegó el momento de que un niño y su elefantito les demuestre lo que significa ser un amigo de verdad.
La espiral de los caracoles
por Itandehui Cruz
¿Qué puede hacer una niña para proteger la tranquilidad de la pequeña familia que forman solo ella, su papá y sus mascotas, los caracoles de su jardín? Cuando Carolina conoce a Rosa, una amiga de su papá, no le gusta nada. Pero el entusiasmo de su papá la convence de que es necesario alejar a Rosa, y consigue a un papá sustituto que resulta tener muy buenas intenciones, pero al que no le salen muy bien las cosas. En un jardín con caracoles Carolina aprenderá a convivir en familia. La ayuda de un amigo siempre facilitará asimilar los cambios.
Selection for October 19
The Wonder Test
by Michelle Richmond
Escaping New York City and the espionage case that made her question everything, recently widowed Lina returns home to Greenfield, California with her teenage son Rory. She discovers that her sleepy hometown has been transformed into a Silicon Valley suburb on steroids, obsessed with an annual exam called The Wonder Test. When students at her son’s high school go missing, reappearing under mysterious circumstances, Lina must summon her strength and push her own ethical boundaries to the limits in order to solve the crimes.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
The Last Stone
by ark Bowden
As a rookie reporter in Maryland, Bowden followed the 1975 disappearance of two preteen sisters. A massive police effort found nothing. The investigation was shelved, and mystery endured. Then, in 2013, a cold case squad detective found something he and a generation of detectives had missed.
Lies Like Wildfire
by Jennifer Lynn Alvarez (local author)
In Gap Mountain, California, everyone knows about fire season. And no one is more vigilant than 18-year-old Hannah Warner, the sheriff’s daughter and aspiring FBI agent. When Hannah and her best friends accidentally spark an enormous and deadly wildfire, their instinct is to lie to the police and the fire investigators. But as the blaze roars through their rural town and toward Yosemite National Park, Hannah’s friends begin to crack and she finds herself going to extreme lengths to protect their secret.
Suspense classic that influenced the 1960 movie, Psycho, by Alfred Hitchcock. Tells the story of a sadistic headmaster of a Parisian boarding school who is murdered by his wife and mistress, whom he has mistreated. The women dump his body in a swimming pool. When the pool is drained, the body has disappeared. Then come reports of sightings, terrifying his killers.
(DVD)
When the Stars Go Dark
by Paula McLain
Retreating to her childhood foster home in the wake of a tragedy, a veteran missing-persons detective becomes entwined in the search for a local teen whose disappearance eerily resembles an unsolved case from the detective’s past.
(Print book, large type book, eBook, eAudiobook, book on CD, Playaway)
Run Away
by Harlan Coben
After discovering his drug-addicted daughter Paige, who he has not seen in six months, panhandling in Central Park, Simon follows her into a dark and dangerous world he never knew existed that puts his family and his life on the line.
No Place for Monsters
by Kory Merritt
Cowslip Grove seems like the perfect place to raise a family until the children start disappearing. Nobody looks for the children because nobody can remember them. Nobody except Levi and Kat. Now they must figure out what terrible presence is taking the children and fight it to save the missing kids, before the whole town disappears.
El Juego del Alma
por Javier Castillo
¿Quieres jugar? Nueva York, 2011. Una chica de quince años aparece crucificada en una iglesia en un suburbio a las afueras. Miren Triggs, periodista de investigación del Manhattan Press, recibe de manera inesperada un extraño sobre. En su interior, la polaroid de una chica amordazada y maniatada, con una sola anotación: 'Gina Pebbles, 2002.' Miren Triggs y Jim Schmoer, su antiguo profesor de periodismo, seguirán la pista de la chica de la imagen mientras investigan la crucifixión de Nueva York. Así se adentrarán en una institución religiosa con extraños rituales y se sumergirán en un oscuro secreto que, de descubrirse, puede cambiarlo todo.
Selection for October 12
Harrow
by Joy Williams
With her mother missing and her boarding school closed, Khristen searches the post-apocalyptic landscape until she reaches a “resort” on the shores of a putrid lake.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
Gold Fame Citrus
by Claire Watkins
In the wake of a devastating Southern California drought, two idealistic holdouts fall in love and scavenge for their needs before taking charge of a mysterious child and embarking on a perilous journey in search of water.
Bannerless
by Carrie Vaughan
An investigator must discover the truth behind a mysterious death in a world where small communities struggle to maintain a ravaged civilization decades after environmental and economic collapse.
Snowpiercer
Season 1
Seven years after the world has become a frozen wasteland, the remnants of humanity inhabit a perpetually-moving train that circles the globe, where class warfare, social injustice and the politics of survival play out.
(DVD)
A Life on Our Planet
My Witness Statement and a Vision for the Future
by David Attenborough
See the world. Then make it better. Attenborough tells us we have one final chance to create the perfect home for ourselves and restore the wonderful world we inherited. All we need is the will to do so.
The Uninhabitable Earth
Life after Warming
by David Wallace-Wells
Without a revolution in how billions of humans conduct their lives, parts of the Earth could become close to uninhabitable as soon as the end of this century. Like An Inconvenient Truth and Silent Spring before it, The Uninhabitable Earth is both a meditation on the devastation we have brought upon ourselves and an impassioned call to action.
The Marrow Thieves
by Cherie Dimaline
In a future world ravaged by global warming, people have lost the ability to dream, and the dreamlessness has led to widespread madness. The only people still able to dream are North America's indigenous population, and it is their bone marrow that holds the cure for the rest of the world. But getting the marrow – and dreams – means death for the unwilling donors.
Cleo Porter and the Body Electric
by Jake Burt
Like everyone else, 12-year-old Cleo and her parents are sealed in an apartment without windows or doors. Their food is dropped off by drones. They are safe from the disease that nearly wiped humans from the earth. When they receive a package clearly meant for someone else – a package containing a substance critical for a stranger's survival – Cleo knows the clock is ticking.
Quién teme a la muerte
por Nnedi Okorafor
En el África postapocalíptica, el mundo ha cambiado de muchas maneras. Pero en una región, el genocidio tribal sigue asolando la tierra. Una mujer que ha sobrevivido la aniquilación de su pueblo y su propia violación vaga por el desierto buscando la muerte. En vez de encontrarla, da luz a una niña color de arena. Al crecer, Onyesonwu entiende que está marcada por la violencia de su concepción. Pero además comienza a manifestar señales de poseer una magia única, y durante una visita al reino de los espíritus se entera de algo trepidante: un ser muy poderoso la quiere asesinar.
Selection for October 5
Matrix
by Lauren Groff
Cast out of the royal court by Eleanor of Aquitaine, 17-year-old Marie de France is sent to England to be the new prioress of an impoverished abbey. Born the last in a long line of women warriors and crusaders, Marie is determined to chart a bold new course for the women she now leads and protects.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
Galileo's Daughter
A Historical Memoir of
Science, Faith, and Love
by Dava Sobel
Sobel presents a stunning portrait of a person hitherto lost to history. Of Galileo’s three illegitimate children, the eldest best mirrored his own brilliance, industry, and sensibility, and by virtue of these qualities became his confidante.
The Pope’s Daughter
The Extraordinary Life of
Felice della Rovere
by Caroline Murphy Felice
della Rovere was the illegitimate daughter of Pope Julius II. Murphy has used such primary sources as Felice’s diaries, account books, and other Orsini archival materials to bring into the foreground a woman who lived in the midst of the political and cultural intrigues of Renaissance Rome.
The Book of Longings
by Sue Monk Kidd
A 1st Century intellectual fights the limitations imposed on women before an encounter with an 18-year-old Jesus leads to their marriage, his dangerous public ministry and her flight to safety in Alexandria.
(Print book, large type Book, eBook, eAudiobook, book on CD)
Sacred Hearts
by Sarah Dunant
Condemned by 16th Century demands for lucrative dowries in order to marry, young Serafina is ripped from an illicit love affair and confined in an Italian convent. She passionately rebels and reminds the convent’s doctor of her own unhappy early years.
Willy convinces Colette to ghostwrite a semi-autobiographical novel about a witty and brazen country girl named Claudine, sparking a bestseller and a cultural sensation, inspiring additional Claudine novels. Colette’s fight over creative ownership and gender roles drives her to overcome societal constraints, revolutionizing literature, fashion and sexual expression.
(DVD)
History vs Women
The Defiant Lives That They
Don’t Want You to Know
by Anita Sarkeesian & Ebony Adams
Introduction to a range of dynamic women across many different races, countries, time periods, and classes. The authors know that it is easier to learn about white, Western people-- especially males-- than of people of color, queer and trans folks, and people with disabilities. They hope to reframe the history you thought you knew.
Queen of the Sea
by Dylan Meconis
When her sister seizes the throne, Queen Eleanor of Albion is banished to a tiny island off the coast of her kingdom, where the nuns of the convent spend their days peacefully praying, sewing, and gardening. But the island is also home to Margaret, a mysterious young orphan girl whose life is upturned when the cold, regal stranger arrives.
Las Palomillas de la Noche
por Helena María Viramontes
En llamar la atención a las complejas vidas y experiencias de las niñas y mujeres mexicoamericanas, esta edición bilingüe que contiene la primera traducción al español de la colección debut de Viramontes, The Moths and Other Stories, hará que este trabajo histórico esté disponible para un público más amplio.
Selection for September 28
Beautiful World, Where are You
by Sally Rooney
Alice, Felix, Eileen, and Simon are still young—but life is catching up with them. They desire each other, they delude each other, they get together, they break apart. They have sex, they worry about sex, they worry about their friendships and the world they live in. Will they find a way to believe in a beautiful world?
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
Filthy Animals
by Brandon Taylor
Interconnected stories set among Midwestern artists and creative types center around a young man trysting with two dancers in an open relationship. Like Rooney’s fiction, this book explores the interpersonal relationships, emotional lives, and mental health of complex young characters.
Exciting Times
by Naoise Dolan
Millennial Irish expat Ava becomes entangled in a love triangle with a male banker and a female lawyer. Like Beautiful World, this novel features the musings of Irish millennials on politics and class alongside their efforts at navigating knotty romantic relationships.
Queenie
by Candice Carty-Williams
Queenie, a 25-year-old British-Jamaican woman, struggles to have a sense of purpose after being dumped by her white boyfriend. She finds herself wondering, “What are you doing? Why are you doing it? Who do you want to be?” – all of the questions today’s woman must face in a world trying to answer them for her.
Time Pieces
A Dublin Memoir
by John Banville
A memoir of the author’s life near Dublin, a city that inspired his imagination and literary life and served as a backdrop for the dissatisfactions of adult years shaped by Dublin’s cultural, political, architectural, and social history.
Finding Ireland
A Poet’s Explorations of Irish Literature and Culture
by Richard Tillinghast
As an American poet and critic who visited and lived in Ireland periodically before becoming a resident in 2005, Tillinghast is uniquely suited to write about the culture, history, and literature of his adopted country.
I’ll Give You the Sun
by Jandy Nelson
At first, Jude and her twin brother Noah are inseparable. Years later, they’re barely speaking. Something has happened to change them in different yet equally devastating ways. The early years are Noah’s to tell; the later years are Jude’s. What the twins don’t realize is that they each have only half the story, and if they could just find their way back to one another, they’d have a chance to remake their world.
The story of a sudden and powerful romance that blossoms between an adolescent boy and a summer guest at his parents’ cliffside mansion on the Italian Riviera.
(DVD)
Selection for September 21
The Bohemians
by Jasmin Darznik
In 1918, a young and bright-eyed Dorothea Lange arrives in San Francisco, where a disaster kick-starts a new life.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
Dorothea Lange
A Life Beyond Limits
by Linda Gordon
A riveting portrait of one of America's most renowned photographers.
An American Exodus
A Record of Human Erosion
by Dorothea Lange & Paul Taylor
First published in 1939, this book documents the rural poverty of the Depression-era exodus that brought more than 300,000 migrants to California in search of farm work, a westward mass migration driven by economic deprivation.
Dorothea Lange
The Photographer Who Found the Faces of the Depression
by Carole Boston Weatherford
Before she raised her lens to take her most iconic photo, Dorothea Lange took photos of the downtrodden. In this picture book biography, Weatherford captures the spirit of the influential photographer.
Women in Art
by Rachel Ignotofsky
Charmingly Illustrated profiles of 50 pioneering female artists, from the 11th Century to today.
The Japanese Lover
by Isabel Allende
A multigenerational epic that follows the impossible romance between a World War II escapee from the Nazis and a Japanese gardener’s son, whose story is discovered decades later by a care worker who would come to terms with her past.
(Print book, large type book, eBook, eAudiobook, book on CD)
The Valley of Amazement
by Amy Tan
Violet Minturn, a half-Chinese/half-American courtesan who deals in seduction and illusion in Shanghai, struggles to find her place in the world, while her mother, Lucia, tries to make sense of the choices she has made and the men who have shaped her.
Profiles American photographer Dorothea Lange, who came to the attention of the world with her photographs documenting the Great Depression, and achieved lasting fame in the postwar years.
(DVD)
Selection for September 14
The Last Nomad
by Shugri Said Salh
A captivating memoir about a woman’s journey from her idyllic childhood with her nomadic grandmother in the deserts of Somalia to her escape from her country’s brutal civil war and eventually to America.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
Always Another Country
A Memoir of Exile and Home
by Sisonke Msimang
Born in exile to a guerrilla father and a working mother, Sisonke Msimang is constantly on the move. Her parents, talented and highly educated, travel from Zambia to Kenya and Canada and beyond with their young family. Always the outsider, and against a backdrop of racism and xenophobia, Sisonke develops a keenly perceptive view of the world.
Beyond the Sand and Sea
One Family’s Quest for a Country to Call Home
by Ty McCormick
When Asad Hussein was growing up in the world’s largest refugee camp, nearly every aspect of life revolved around getting to America, a distant land where anything was possible.
Adua
by Igiaba Scego
A searing novel about a young immigrant woman’s dream of freedom in Rome and the legacies of her African past.
When Stars Are Scattered
by Victoria Jamieson and Omar Mohamed
Omar and his younger brother Hassan live in a refugee camp. When an opportunity comes along for Omar to get an education, he must decide between going to school every day or caring for his nonverbal brother in this intimate and touching portrayal of family and daily life in a refugee camp.
Call Me American
The Extraordinary True Story of a Young Somali Immigrant
by Abdi Nor Iftin
Adapted for young adults, this gripping story follows one boy’s journey into young adulthood and offers an intimate account of modern immigration. Abdi Nor Iftin grew up amidst a blend of cultures in Somalia. But when the threat of civil war reached Abdi’s doorstep, his family was forced to flee to safety.
Toivon tuolla puolen
The Other Side of Hope
This wry, melancholic comedy from Aki Kaurismäki, a response to the ongoing global refugee crisis, follows two people searching for a place to call home. Khaled (Sherwan Haji), a displaced Syrian, lands in Helsinki as a stowaway. Meanwhile, middle-aged Finnish salesman Wikström (Sakari Kuosmanen) leaves his wife and his job and buys a conspicuously unprofitable restaurant. The Other Side of Hope is a bittersweet celebration of pockets of human kindness in an unwelcoming world.
(DVD)
El Viaje
por Francesca Sanna
¿Cómo será la experiencia de tener que dejar todo y viajar muchos kilómetros hacia un lugar extraño? Una madre y sus dos hijos emprendieron un viaje como ese, repleto de un gran temor hacia lo desconocido, pero, al mismo tiempo, de una profunda esperanza. Basado en su propia experiencia de interactuar con gente obligada a buscar un nuevo hogar y contado desde la perspectiva de una joven niña, Francesca Sanna ha creado un libro hermoso y sensible sobre una problemática significativa de nuestro tiempo.
Selection for September 7
Appleseed
by Matt Bell
A thousand years in the future: North America is covered by a massive sheet of ice. One lonely sentient being inhabits a tech station on top of the glacier, and sets out to follow a homing beacon across the continent in the hopes of discovering the last remnant of civilization.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
How to Prepare
for Climate Change
A Practical Guide to
Surviving the Chaos
by David Pogue
Sensible advice for how the rest of us should start to ready ourselves for the years ahead, including what to grow, what to eat, how to build, how to insure, where to invest, how to prepare your children and pets, and even where to consider relocating when the time comes.
How to Avoid a Climate Disaster
The Solutions We Have and the Breakthroughs We Need
by Bill Gates
Bill Gates shares what he’s learned in more than a decade of studying climate change and investing in innovations to address the problems, and sets out a vision for how the world can build the tools it needs to get to zero greenhouse gas emissions.
(Print book (Spanish and English), large type book, eBook, eAudiobook)
Cloud Atlas
by David Mitchell
Appleseed is an alternative history novel that focuses on climate apocalypse while Cloud Atlas is experimental literary fiction that addresses social issues, both past and future.
(Print book (Spanish and English), book on CD, eBook, eAudiobook)
Hummingbird Salamander
by Jeff VanderMeer
Thought-provoking and intricately plotted stories blend speculative fiction with thriller motifs to highlight environmental issues and animal extinctions.
Atlantis
The Accidental Invasion
by Gregory Mone
Fourteen-year-old Kaya, of the undersea, high-tech world of Atlantis, and 12-year-old Lewis, of the climate-threatened world above water, embark on a dangerous adventure when he enters her realm.
The Ones We’re Meant to Find
by Joan He
In a near future when life is harsh outside of Earth’s last unpolluted place, Cee tries to leave an abandoned island while her sister, STEM prodigy Kasey, seeks escape from the science and home she once trusted.
En español para niños. ¿Cuańto calor es 1 grado más?
qué pasa con el cambio climático?
por Kristina Scharmacher-Schreiber
¿Se está volviendo el clima cada vez más cálido? ¿Se puede sentir una diferencia de un grado? Los niños quieren entender lo que significa el cambio climático. Con imágenes descriptivas y textos cortos se explican las conexiones: ¿Por qué hay diferentes zonas climáticas en la tierra? ¿Cómo afecta el efecto invernadero? ¿Cómo se sabe cómo era antes el clima? También muestra cómo nuestras acciones afectan al clima en la vida cotidiana. ¡Y cómo todos podemos proteger la tierra!
Selection for August 31
Damnation Spring
by Ash Davidson
A midwife inadvertently threatens the livelihoods of her family and neighbors after noticing an increase in local miscarriages and believes it's caused by the pesticides used by the Sanderson Timber Company, her husband's employer.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
The Overstory
by Richard Powers
Interlocking fables about nine remarkable strangers who are summoned in different ways by trees for an ultimate, brutal stand to save the continent's few remaining acres of virgin forest.
Greenwood
by Michael Christie
A metaphorical tale tracing multiple generations of a once-wealthy family finds its members navigating secrets and crimes linked to the trees that have made and broken their fortunes.
One Small Hop
by Madelyn Rosenberg
Ahab Goldstein is a seventh-grader in a not-so-distant future when the environment has turned toxic, and the corrupt Environmental Police Force is in control. When Ahab and his friends find a real live bullfrog, possibly the last one in America, they are faced with a choice: turn it over (NO!), leave it alone, or bike to Canada to find it a mate.
Jelly
by Clare Rees
After the sea levels rise and the world ends, Martha and other survivors are stuck on a giant killer jellyfish, drifting off shore. If boredom does not kill them, maybe their escape attempts will.
A Precautionary Tale
How One Small Town Banned Pesticides, Preserved Its Food Heritage, and Inspired a Movement
by Philip Ackerman-Leist
What do you do when your organic crops are tainted with someone else's pesticides? Your children are exposed to toxic drifts? People around the world have felt helpless in the face of such challenges. But in the Northern Italian enclave of Mals, an unlikely group of activists and a forward-thinking mayor came together to ban pesticides by a referendum vote, making it the first place on Earth to accomplish such a feat, and a model for others to follow.
Amity and Prosperity
by Eliza Griswold
The story of the energy boom's impact on a small town at the edge of Appalachia, and one woman's transformation from a struggling single parent to an unlikely activist.
Cadáver exquisito
por Agustina María Bazterrica
A causa de un virus mortal que afecta a los animales y contagia a los seres humanos, el mundo se ha convertido en un lugar gris, escéptico e inhóspito, y la sociedad se divide entre aquellos que comen y aquellos que son comidos. El Premio Clarín 2017 fue otorgado a esta novela mayor, una sólida y escalofriante pesadilla futurista en la que el canibalismo es legitimado en gran parte del mundo a causa de un virus que afecta a los animales y resulta mortal para los seres humanos.
El Mal de la Taiga
por Cristina Rivera Garza
Una ex detective vuelve, después de mucho tiempo y bastantes fracasos, a aceptar un caso: encontrar y traer de vuelta a una mujer que abandonó a su marido para huir con otro hombre hacia el interior de la taiga. Este marido traicionado está convencido, por un breve telegrama que recibió, que en realidad su segunda ex esposa quiere que él la encuentre. La ahora escritora de novelas negras contrata a un traductor para que se internen en ese bosque donde cosas extrañas suceden, donde la realidad se distorsiona y donde la traducción misma comienza a traicionar el sentido del lenguaje y de los sentidos.
Selection for August 24
Cultish
The Language of Fanaticism
by Amanda Montell
Cultish language is something we hear, and are influenced by, every single day. Montell exposes the verbal elements that make a wide spectrum of communities "cultish."
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Fierce Little Thing
by Miranda Beverly-Whittemore
Five estranged friends receive threatening letters demanding their return to a former cult or the terrible thing they did as teenagers will be revealed.
The Children of Red Peak
by Craig DiLouie
David Young, Deacon Price, and Beth Harris grew up in an overbearing religious community on the isolated mountain Red Peak, and they were a few of the only survivors of its horrific last days. Years later, the trauma of what they experienced never feels far behind. When a fellow survivor commits suicide, they reunite to confront their past and share their stories.
Knowing What to Say
Finding the Words to Fit Any Situation
by Patti Kelley Criswell
Cultish: The Language of Fanaticism shows how people can use language for manipulation. Instead, this guide shows kids how to communicate positively in a variety of common situations such as when a friend talks about you behind your back and making an appropriate apology.
The Project
by Courtney Summers
Lo Denham wants to expose the Unity Project as a cult and reconnect with her indoctrinated sister, but as she immerses herself in the group with no signs of Bea, Lo begins to question everything she thought was true.
The Sound of Gravel
by Ruth Wariner
The 39th of her father’s 42 children, Ruth Wariner grew up in polygamist family on a farm in rural Mexico. In The Sound of Gravel, she offers an unforgettable portrait of the violence that threatened her community, her family’s fierce sense of loyalty, and her own unshakeable belief in the possibility of a better life.
For her entire life, the cult she was born into has been all that teenage Selah has known. When her insular world is rocked by a series of nightmarish visions and disturbing revelations, Selah begins to question everything about her existence.
(DVD)
Losing Reality
On Cults, Cultism, and the Mindset of Political and Religious Zealotry
by Robert Jay Lifton
A definitive account of the psychology of zealotry, from a National Book Award winner and a leading authority on the nature of cults, political absolutism, and mind control.
The Burn Zone
by Linnell Renee
After seven years of faithfully following her spiritual teacher, Renee Linnell finally realized she was in a cult and had been severely brainwashed. But how did that happen to someone like her? She had started five different companies and had an MBA from NYU. Part inspirational story, part cautionary tale, this is a memoir for spiritual seekers and an exploration of how we give up our power.
Selection for August 17
Breathing Fire
Female Inmate Firefighters on the Front Lines of California’s Wildfires
by Jaime Lowe
A groundbreaking investigation of the prison system and an intimate portrayal of the women of California's Correctional Camps who put their lives on the line, while imprisoned, to save a state in peril.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
A Knock at Midnight
A Story of Hope, Justice,
and Freedom
by Brittany K. Barnett
An urgent call to free those buried alive by America's legal system, and an inspiring true story about unwavering belief in humanity. Barnett was a law student when she came across the case of Sharanda Jones, who was serving a life sentence without parole-for a first-time drug offense. Moved by Sharanda's plight, Brittany set to work to gain her freedom.
A Fire Story
by Brian Fies
A firsthand account of the 2017 Tubbs Fire in Northern California by a local author. An honest, unflinching depiction of the author’s personal experiences, including losing his house and every possession he and his wife had that didn't fit into the back of their car. Originally posted online, he expanded the original web comic to include environmental insight and the fire stories of his neighbors and others in his community.
The Mars Room
by Rachel Kushner
A woman begins serving two life sentences in 2003 at Stanville Women's Correctional Facility deep in California's Central Valley, reflecting on the San Francisco of her youth and her relationship with her young son while navigating the harsh realities of a bare-essentials life of casual violence at the hands of the guards and her fellow inmates.
Something New Under the Sun
by Alexandra Kleeman
In a climate-ravaged near-future California, a novelist discovers that a company behind a mysterious new brand of synthetic water is responsible for the recent droughts and wildfires and teams up with a starlet to investigate.
I Survived the California
Wildfires, 2018
by Lauren Tarshis
Traces the story of a boy who moves across the country to rural northern California, where his efforts to adjust are challenged by a fast-moving firestorm that places family homes and lives at risk.
Finding Freedom
Writings from Death Row
by Jarvis Jay Masters
Incarcerated in San Quentin at the age of 19 for armed robbery, Jarvis Masters was accused four years later of participating in a conspiracy that resulted in the death of a prison guard. Finding Freedom is a collection of prison stories, sometimes shocking, sometimes sad, often funny, always immediate.
Golden Gulag
Prisons, Surplus, Crisis and Opposition in Globalizing California
by Ruth Wilson Gilmore
Focuses on California’s dominant role in the explosion of incarceration in America, covering the period from 1980 to the present, with an eye to how capitalism fuels the system.
Selection for August 10
Nightbitch
by Rachel Yoder
An artist turned stay-at-home mom becomes convinced that she is turning into a dog and, as her symptoms intensify, struggles to keep her alter-canine-identity a secret, until she meets a group of mothers who may also be more than what they seem.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
The Need
by Helen Phillips
A woman grapples with the complex dualities of motherhood—joy and dread, tenderness and anxiety—after confronting a masked intruder in her home.
The Family Fang
by Kevin Wilson
When their parents who have dedicated themselves to making great art by sacrificing normality plan one last performance, siblings Annie and Buster, returning home after their individual worlds collapse, are faced with a difficult decision.
Dear Ijeawele
Or a Feminist Manifesto in Fifteen Suggestions
by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Receiving a letter from a friend asking her how to raise her baby girl to be a feminist, Adichie responded with 15 suggestions for how to empower a daughter to become a strong, independent woman.
Mom Genes
Inside the New Science of Our Ancient Maternal Instinct
by Abigail Tucker
A fascinating and provocative exploration of the biology of motherhood. Part scientific odyssey, part memoir, Mom Genes weaves the latest research with Tucker’s personal experiences to create a delightful, surprising, and poignant portrait of motherhood.
The Rust Maidens
by Gwendolyn Kiste
It’s the summer of 1980 in Cleveland, and Phoebe Shaw and her best friend Jacqueline have just graduated high school, only to confront an ugly, uncertain future. The girls they’ve grown up with are changing, their bones exposed like corroded metal beneath their flesh. Nobody can explain what’s happening or why—except perhaps the Rust Maidens themselves. Whispering in secret, they know more than they’re telling, and Phoebe realizes her former friends are quietly preparing for something that will tear their neighborhood apart.
(Print book, large print book, eBook, eAudiobook, book on CD)
Animorphs
The Invasion
by Chris Grine
Sometimes weird things happen to people. Ask Jake. He could tell you about the night he and his friends saw a strange light in the sky that seemed to be heading right for them. That was the night five normal kids learned that humanity is under a silent attack, and were given the power to fight back. Now Jake, Rachel, Cassie, Tobias, and Marco can transform into some of the most dangerous creatures on Earth. And they must use that power to outsmart an evil greater than anything the world has ever seen.
The Metamorphosis
by Franz Kafka
When Gregor Samsa awakens one morning, he discovers that he has changed into a giant insect.
Selection for August 3
Leave the World Behind
by Rumaan Alam
Amanda and Clay head to a remote corner of Long Island expecting a taste of the good life in the luxurious home they've rented for the week. The houseowners, Ruth and G.H., arrive in the middle of the night in a panic. They say a sudden blackout has swept the city: the TV and internet are down, and no cell phone service. Is the vacation home, isolated from civilization, a safe place for their families?
(Print book, large print book, eBook, eAudiobook, book on CD)
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
The Age of Miracles
by Karen Walker Thompson
The coming-of-age story of young Julia, whose world is thrown into upheaval when it is discovered that the Earth’s rotation has suddenly begun to slow, posing a catastrophic threat to all life. Both Leave the World Behind and The Age of Miracles show how catastrophic changes disrupt families and communities in compelling novels set in worlds full of uncertainty.
(Print book, large print book, eBook, eAudiobook, book on CD)
A Beginning at the End
by Mike Chen
Four survivors try to rebuild their personal lives six years after a global pandemic brings about a literal apocalypse.
The Unthinkable
by Amanda Ripley
Ripley, a Time reporter who has covered Hurricane Katrina and other catastrophes and whose article “How To Get Out Alive” inspired this book, offers a discussion of disaster and survival, drawing on both survivors’ personal accounts and scientific studies that reveal how the human brain functions under duress.
A Paradise Built in Hell
by Rebecca Solnit
Explores the phenomenon through which people become resourceful and altruistic after a disaster and communities reflect a shared sense of purpose, analyzing events ranging from the 1906 San Francisco earthquake to 9/11.
What She Found in the Woods
by Josephine Angelini
While summering in her grandparents’ small Oregon town, where a serial murderer lurks, 18-year-old Magdalena faces recovery from a scandal at her Manhattan private school, schizophrenia, and falling in love with “Wildboy.” Told partly through journal entries.
The Longest Night of Charlie Noon
by Christopher Edge
As time plays tricks and night falls without warning, Johnny, Dizzy, and Charlie, who are lost in the woods, must elude the danger that lurks in shadows and work together to find a way out. Includes notes about the science behind the story.
Cosas Que Nunca Cambian
by Richard Zela
Hoy es el Día de los Muertos, una de las fiestas favoritas de Norita. Pero esta vez no: alguien mordió a su abuelo y la convirtió en una muerta viviente con apetitos muy curiosos. En medio de una ciudad en medio de un apocalipsis zombie, Norita y su abuelo aprovechan las circunstancias para emprender un viaje al cementerio con la ayuda de un carrito de tamales, esperando ver por última vez a sus seres queridos, quienes han vuelto de nuevo. ... ¿a la vida? Por el autor y ilustrador mexicano Richard Zela.
American War
by Omar El Akkad, narrated by Dion Graham
This is a gripping future dystopian tale of an American civil war, and the story of a young girl’s survival. Check out the audiobook version of this novel, read by The Wire actor and AudioFile Golden Voice narrator Dion Graham.
Selection for July 27
The Final Girl Support Group
by Grady Hendrix
A fast-paced, thrilling horror novel. Lynnette Tarkington is a real-life final girl who survived a massacre 22 years ago, and it has defined every day of her life since. For more than a decade she’s been meeting with five other actual final girls and their therapist in a support group for those who survived the unthinkable, putting their lives back together, piece by piece. That is until one of the women misses a meeting and Lynnette’s worst fears are realized.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
My Sister the Serial Killer
by Oyinkan Braithwaite
Realizing that her beautiful, beloved younger sister has murdered yet another boyfriend, an embittered Nigerian woman works to direct suspicion away from the family, until a handsome doctor she fancies asks for her sister’s number.
Night of the Mannequins
by Stephen Graham Jones
A contemporary horror story where a teen prank goes very wrong and all hell breaks loose: is there a supernatural cause, a psychopath on the loose, or both?
Solstice
by Lorence Alison
Offered an all-expenses-paid trip to the exclusive Solstice Festival, Adri throws caution, her prestigious summer internship, and her parents’ goodwill to the wind. When the horde of affluent, entitled teen party-goers arrive at the island paradise, there’s barely any food, nowhere to stay, not nearly enough porta-potties – and the first dead body washes up on the beach.
Camp Murderface
by Josh Berk and Saundra Mitchell
The year: 1983. Camp Sweetwater is finally reopening, three decades after it mysteriously shut down. Campers Corryn Quinn and Tez Jones have each had more than enough of their regular lives – they’re so ready to take their summer at Sweetwater by storm. But before they can so much as toast one marshmallow, strange happenings start happening. Can they survive the summer?
The Murders that Made Us
How Vigilantes, Hoodlums, Mob Bosses, Serial Killers, and Cult Leaders Built the San Francisco Bay Area
by Bob Calhoun
The 170-year history of the San Francisco Bay Area told through its crimes and how they intertwine with the city’s art, music, and politics. From the city’s earliest days, where vigilantes hung perps from buildings and newspaper publishers shot it out on Market Street, to the kidnapping of Patty Hearst and the Zodiac Killer, crime has made the people of San Francisco who they are.
I’ll Be Gone in the Dark
One Woman’s Obsessive Search for the Golden State killer
by Michelle McNamara
For more than 10 years, a mysterious and violent predator committed 50 sexual assaults in Northern California before moving south, where he perpetrated 10 sadistic murders. Then he disappeared, eluding capture by multiple police forces and some of the best detectives in the area. Three decades later, Michelle McNamara was determined to find the violent psychopath she called “the Golden State Killer.”
(Print book, large type book, eBook, eAudiobook, book on CD)
Stay Sexy & Don’t Get Murdered
The Definitive How-To Guide
by Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark
From the voices behind the number one hit podcast My Favorite Murder! Sharing never-before-heard stories ranging from their struggles with depression, eating disorders, and addiction, the authors recount their biggest mistakes and deepest fears, reflecting on the formative life events that shaped them into two of the most followed voices in the nation.
Selection for July 20
Shirley Jackson
A Rather Haunted Life
by Ruth Franklin
The tumultuous life of the author behind such classics as The Haunting of Hill House and The Lottery. Placing Jackson within an American Gothic tradition of Hawthorne and Poe, Franklin demonstrates how her unique contribution to this genre came from her focus on "domestic horror" drawn from an era hostile to women.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
We Have Always Lived in the Castle
by Shirley Jackson
Deeply unsettling, this novel about a perverse, isolated, and possibly murderous family follows their dramatic struggle with the arrival of an unexpected visitor who interrupts their unusual way of life.
The Letters of Shirley Jackson
As well as being a bestselling author, Shirley Jackson spent much of her adult life as a mother of four in Vermont, and the landscape here is often the everyday. But in recounting these events, she turns them into remarkable stories: entertaining, revealing, and wise. At the same time, many of these letters provide fresh insight into the genesis and progress of Jackson’s writing over nearly three decades.
Renowned horror writer Shirley Jackson is on the precipice of writing her masterpiece when the arrival of newlyweds upends her meticulous routine and heightens tensions in her already tempestuous relationship with her philandering husband.
(DVD)
We Have Always Lived in the Castle
This 2018 film is an adaptation of Shirley Jackson’s novel.
(DVD)
Shirley
by Susan Merrell
Moving into the home of famed writer Shirley Jackson and her college professor husband during the summer of 1964, a graduate student and his pregnant wife forge an uneasy friendship with their hosts that is complicated by Jackson's mercurial nature and her turbulent marriage.
9 Magic Wishes
by Shirley Jackson, illustrated by Miles Hyman
A little girl is granted nine wishes by a mysterious magician, and her choices capture a childlike imagination. When she has gone through eight of her wishes, she is hard pressed to make a ninth wish, so instead she leaves it for some other lucky person to find. First published in 1963 with different pictures, this edition is illustrated in full-color by Jackson's grandson.
Shirley Jackson's The Lottery
The Authorized Graphic Adaptation
adapted by Miles Hyman
In a graphic-novel adaptation of the classic spine-tingler, the grandson of the story's original author depicts the eerie town and their shocking ritual in detailed four-color panels that breathe new life into the iconic tale.
Los Abismos
por Pilar Quintana
Con el telón de fondo del estrecho universo femenino formado por mujeres acomodadas a su vida, que no pueden romper con una educación de otro tiempo, Pilar Quintana ha construido una novela intimista, con una voz narradora deslumbrante en su ingenuidad que, desde la memoria del hogar, conduce al lector por las obsesiones que pueblan la niñez de la que la protagonista se está despidiendo. Disponible en libro impreso y libro electrónico.
Selection for July 13
The Book of Difficult Fruit
arguments for the tart, tender and unruly
by Kate Lebo
Inspired by 26 fruits, essayist, poet, and pie lady Kate Lebo expertly blends the culinary, medical, and personal in a book of lyrical essays, accompanied by recipes.
(Print book, large type book, book on CD, eBook, eAudiobook)
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
Follow chef Marcus Samuelsson as he immerses himself in diverse immigrant communities and cuisines in cities across the U.S.
(DVD)
The plant messiah
adventures in search of the
world's rarest species
by Carlos Magdalena
A scientist offers an impassioned memoir of saving extraordinary plants on the brink of extinction, describing his search for exotic plants in remote locations and his laboratory efforts to encourage vulnerable plants to thrive.
Cocinología
la ciencia de cocinar
por Stuart Farrimond
Profundiza en la extraña ciencia de la cocina, en este libro. Encuentra los conceptos fundamentales de la cocina revelados junto con prácticos consejos y técnicas paso a paso, que harán de tu cocina un auténtico laboratorio.
Pie school
lessons in fruit, flour and butter
by Kate Lebo
Kate Lebo shares her recipes for 50 perfect pies. Included are apple (of course), five ways with rhubarb, lemon chiffon, several blueberry pie variations, galettes, and more.
There's No Ham in Hamburgers
Facts and Folklore About
Our Favorite Foods
by Kim Zachman
Why is there no ham in hamburgers? How did we make ice cream before we could make ice? From the origins of pizza to the invention of chicken fingers, this book has all the ingredients for an entertaining read about the origins of some of America’s most popular foods.
A Woman’s Place
The Inventors, Rumrunners, Lawbreakers, Scientists
& Single Moms Who Changed
the World with Food
by Deepi Ahluwalia
Discover the hidden figures of food, the women who changed the way we eat. From Julia Child, to the inventor of the dishwasher, to the suffragette who published cookbooks to finance their fight for justice, these trailblazers used the power of food to break barriers and change the world. Includes 10 recipes.
The Recipe Box
by Viola Shipman
When her efforts to pursue a professional culinary life away from her family’s northern Michigan orchard end in disappointment, Sam spends a summer working for the family pie shop. She begins to learn about and understand the women in her life, her family’s history and her passion for food as she prepares beloved ancestral recipes.
The School of Essential Ingredients
by Erica Bauermeister
Eight students gather in Lillian’s Restaurant every Monday night for cooking class. It soon becomes clear, however, that each one seeks a recipe for something beyond the kitchen as Chef Lillian, a woman whose connection with food is both soulful and exacting, helps them to create dishes whose flavor and techniques expand beyond the restaurant and into the secret corners of her students’ lives.
Selection for July 6
How the Word is Passed
a reckoning with the history of slavery across America
by Clint Smith
An unforgettable tour of monuments and landmarks – those that are honest about the past and those that are not – that offer an intergenerational story of how slavery has been central in shaping our nation’s collective history, and ourselves.
(Print book, large type book, book on CD, eBook, eAudiobook)
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
On Juneteenth
by Annette Gordon-Reed
The essential, sweeping story of Juneteenth’s integral importance to American history.
Four Hundred Souls
edited by Ibram X. Kendi
and Keisha N. Blain
A “choral history” of African Americans covering 400 years of history in the voices of 80 writers, edited by the bestselling, National Book Award-winning historian Ibram X. Kendi and Keisha N. Blain.
Master documentary filmmaker Raoul Peck envisions the book James Baldwin never finished. The result is a radical journey into black history that connects the past of the Civil Rights movement to the present of #BlackLivesMatter.
Hale County this morning,
this evening
Composed of intimate and unencumbered moments of people in a community, this film allows the viewer an emotive impression of the historic South - trumpeting the beauty of life and consequences of the social construction of race, while simultaneously a testament to dreaming.
(DVD)
A Sitting in St. James
by Rita Williams-Garcia
1860, Louisiana. After serving as mistress of Le Petit Cottage for more than six decades, Madame Sylvie Guilbert has decided, in spite of her family’s objections, to sit for a portrait. While Madame plots her last hurrah, stories that span generations, of routine horrors, secrets buried, and the tangled bonds of descendants and enslaved, come to light to reveal a true portrait of the Guilberts.
Buried Lives
The Enslaved People of George Washington’s Mount Vernon
by Carla Killough McClafferty
When he was 11 years old, George Washington inherited 10 human beings. The life of the first president has been well chronicled, but the lives of the people of color he owned – the people who sustained his plantation and were buried in unmarked graves there – have not.
En español para adultos
El precio del racismo
la hostilidad racial y la fractura del “sueño americano,”
por Eduardo Porter
En El precio del racismo Porter, periodista veterano del New York Times, muestra cómo la animadversión racial ha paralizado gran parte de las instituciones clave de una sociedad sana, incluyendo los sindicatos, la educación pública y la red de seguridad social, y cómo las profundas consecuencias se hacen cada día más graves. Disponible en libro impreso y libro electrónico
Selection for June 29
The Bohemians
by Jasmin Darznik
In 1918, a young and bright-eyed Dorothea Lange arrives in San Francisco, where a disaster kick-starts a new life.
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Dorothea Lange
A Life Beyond Limits
by Linda Gordon
A riveting portrait of one of America's most renowned photographers.
An American Exodus
A Record of Human Erosion
by Dorothea Lange & Paul Taylor
First published in 1939, this book documents the rural poverty of the Depression-era exodus that brought more than 300,000 migrants to California in search of farm work, a westward mass migration driven by economic deprivation.
Dorothea Lange
The Photographer Who Found the Faces of the Depression
by Carole Boston Weatherford
Before she raised her lens to take her most iconic photo, Dorothea Lange took photos of the downtrodden. In this picture book biography, Weatherford captures the spirit of the influential photographer.
Women in Art
by Rachel Ignotofsky
Charmingly Illustrated profiles of 50 pioneering female artists, from the 11th Century to today.
The Japanese Lover
by Isabel Allende
A multigenerational epic that follows the impossible romance between a World War II escapee from the Nazis and a Japanese gardener’s son, whose story is discovered decades later by a care worker who would come to terms with her past.
(Print book, large type book, eBook, eAudiobook, book on CD)
The Valley of Amazement
by Amy Tan
Violet Minturn, a half-Chinese/half-American courtesan who deals in seduction and illusion in Shanghai, struggles to find her place in the world, while her mother, Lucia, tries to make sense of the choices she has made and the men who have shaped her.
Profiles American photographer Dorothea Lange, who came to the attention of the world with her photographs documenting the Great Depression, and achieved lasting fame in the postwar years.
(DVD)
Selection for June 22
Charmian Kittredge London
Trailblazer, Author, Adventurer
by Iris Jamahl Dunkle
The biography of Charmian Kittredge London, who challenged traditional and societally prescribed gender roles and norms.
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The Paris Wife
by Paula McLain
Meeting through mutual friends in Chicago, Hadley is intrigued by brash “beautiful boy” Ernest Hemingway, and after a brief courtship and small wedding, they take off for Paris. Hadley makes a convincing transformation from an overprotected child to a brave young woman who puts up with impoverished living conditions and shattering loneliness to prop up her husband’s career.
Z
A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald
by Therese Fowler
A tale inspired by the marriage of F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald follows their union in defiance of her father’s opposition and her scandalous transformation into a Jazz Age celebrity in the literary party scenes of New York, Paris, and the French Riviera.
Hourglass
Time, Memory, Marriage
by Dani Shapiro
A piercing, life-affirming memoir about marriage and memory, about the frailty and elasticity of our most essential bonds, and about the accretion, over time, of both sorrow and love. Hourglass is an inquiry into how marriage is transformed by time.
Red Comet
The Short Life and Blazing Art of Sylvia Plath
by Heather L. Clark
An engrossing new biography of Sylvia Plath focuses on her remarkable literary and intellectual growth and achievement, restoring the vivid creative woman behind the longtime Plath myths perpetuated by a pathology-based approach to her life and art.
Devils, Lusts and Strange Desires
The Life of Patricia Highsmith
by Richard Bradford
In this new biography, Bradford considers Highsmith’s bestsellers in the context of her troubled personal life; her alcoholism, licentious sex life, racism, anti-Semitism, misogyny and abundant self-loathing. Made famous by the great success of her psychological thrillers, The Talented Mr Ripley and Strangers on a Train, Highsmith is lauded as one of the most influential and celebrated modern writers.
Headstrong Hallie!
The Story of Hallie Morse Daggett, the First Female “Fire Guard”
by Aimée Bissonette
illustrated by David Hohn
This picture book biography tells the story of Hallie Morse Daggett, the first woman fire guard hired by the US Forest Service, whose hard work and dedication led the way for other women to join the Forest Service.
What Every Girl Should Know
Margaret Sanger’s Journey: A Novel
by Jennifer Ann Mann
In this fictionalized biography, a teenage Maggie Higgins struggles to balance her responsibilities to her family, society’s expectations for women, and her desire to pursue her education and plan for the future.
Selection for June 15
The Book of Eels
by Patrik Svensson
A meditation on the world’s most elusive fish – the eel – and a reflection on the human condition.
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A Most Remarkable Creature
The Hidden Life and Epic Journey of the World’s Smartest Birds of Prey
by Jonathan Meiburg
An enthralling account of a modern voyage of discovery as we meet a rare and mysterious bird of prey – the caracara – that puzzled Darwin, fascinates modern day falconers, and carries secrets of our planet’s deep past in its family history.
The Shark Club
by Ann Kidd Taylor
Nearly two decades after surviving a shark attack in the Gulf of Mexico, a world-traveling marine biologist and respected “shark whisperer” harbors private insecurities that compel her to return to her Florida coast home to explore old and new relationships.
Eels
by Rachel Poliquin
I know what you’re thinking. You’re thinking eels are just long, slippery fishy-things that are boringly ordinary. Well, you’re right! And you’re wrong! Eels only seem ordinary because they are so unknowably extraordinary, they have bamboozled scientists for thousands of years.
Into the Deep
Science, Technology, and the Quest to Protect the Ocean
by Christy Peterson
What lies in the deep? And who is at the forefront of these exciting discoveries? The scientists and research included in this book shed light on the most pressing issues currently facing oceanographers and point us in the right direction to solving these challenges.
The Hungry Tide
by Amitav Ghosh
Off the eastern coast of India lies an extraordinary cluster of islands known as the Sundarbans. In this exotic land, marine biologist Piya, fisherman Fokir and translator Kanai meet. As they travel deep into the remote archipelago, they experience a territory at risk not only from natural disaster, but also from human foolishness and volatile politics.
World of Wonders
In Praise of Fireflies, Whale Sharks, and other Astonishments
by Aimee Nezhukumatathil
A collection of essays, with lush illustrations, about the natural world and the way its inhabitants can teach, support, and inspire us.
Owls of the Eastern Ice
A Quest to Find and Save the World’s Largest Owl
by Jonathan C. Slaght
n American scientist chronicles his travels through remote Russian landscapes to study the elusive and endangered Blakiston’s fish owl.
Selection for June 8
You Look Tired
An Excruciatingly Honest Guide to New Parenthood
by Jenny True
In the tradition of Ali Wong and Amy Schumer comes this whip-smart, spit-out-your-coffee funny guide for new parents – from popular blogger and columnist Jenny True.
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Dad is Fat
by Jim Gaffigan
Stand-up comedian Jim Gaffigan, who’s best known for his legendary riffs on Hot Pockets, bacon, manatees, and McDonald’s, expresses all the joys and horrors of life with five young children.
Dear Girls
Intimate Tales, Untold Secrets & Advice for Living Your Best Life
by Ali Wong
Ali Wong’s heartfelt and hilarious letters to her daughters (the two she put to work while they were still in utero) cover everything they need to know in life, like the unpleasant details of dating, how to be a working mom in a male-dominated profession, and how she trapped their dad.
Confessions of a Domestic Failure
by Bunmi Laditan
After leaving her career to become a stay-at-home-mom, Ashley Keller tries to improve her parenting skills by joining a boot camp called “Motherhood Better” run by her idol, the head of a Pinterest-perfect mommy blog empire, to hilariously awkward results.
(Print book, large type book, Book on CD, eBook, eAudiobook)
Mamá imperfecta
cómo ser exitosa mientras tus hijos te educan
by Maggie Hegyi
No existe un libro mágico con todas las respuestas sobre la maternidad. Éste es un compendio de amor incondicional, de viajes en el tiempo, experiencias y consejos. Todas somos mamás imperfectas llenas de cariño perfecto. Aquí podrás encontrar lo que necesitas para ser una mujer exitosa mientras tus hijos crecen y, de paso, sacarle todo el provecho a la etapa más hermosa de la vida.
Educar con serenidad
soluciones creativas para padres desesperados
by Patricia Ramírez
Los padres y las madres nos tomamos la educación muy en serio, pero debemos dejar de copiar antiguos modelos para empezar a innovar, ser creativos y pensar que existe otra forma de educar sin recurrir a los gritos y a la figura de autoridad. Y, sobre todo, son desesperarnos. Educar non Serenidad ofrece soluciones crativas, divertidas y al alcance de todos para disfrutar educando.
Class Mom
by Laurie Gelman
Frowned upon by conservative fellow PTA members for her past as a single parent, Jen reluctantly agrees to become class mom during her youngest child’s kindergarten year, a role that is challenged by parent drama, hypersensitive allergies, and a former flame.
Don't Wait Up
Confessions of a Stay-At-Work Mom
by iz Astrof
In this blunt and side-splittingly funny book of essays, Liz Astrof embraces the realities of motherhood (and womanhood) that no one ever talks about: like needing to hide from your kids in your closet, your car, or a yoga class on the other side of town, letting them eat candy for dinner because you just can’t deal, to the sheer terror of failing them or at the very least losing them in a mall. And sometimes, many times, wondering if the whole parenting thing wasn’t for you.
Selection for June 1
The Age of Innocence
by Edith Wharton
Newland Archer begins to question the values of high society in Victorian New York when he finds himself torn between two very different women – his proper young fiancée and her exotic cousin.
(Print book, large type book, Book on CD, eBook, eAudiobook)
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Belgravia
by Julian Fellowes
A wealth of historical detail creates a vivid 19th Century upper class world, along with its strict code of conventional conduct, in both The Age of Innocence and Belgravia. Both feature wealthy characters caught in awkward social positions and monetary issues that jeopardize their prospects.
(Print book, large type book, Book on CD, eBook, eAudiobook)
Rules of Civility
by Amor Towles
Both Rules of Civility and The Age of Innocence present stories in which chance encounters between characters force decisions that will heavily influence their futures.
(Print book, large type book, Book on CD, eBook, eAudiobook)
A methodically constructed period piece detailing the constraints on women, political marriages, and secret but tragic love in 18th Century French upper class society.
(DVD)
Edith Wharton
by Hermione Lee
Delving into heretofore untapped sources, the author brilliantly interweaves Edith Wharton’s life with the evolution of her writing, the full scope of which shows her to be far more daring than her stereotype as lapidarian chronicler of the Gilded Age.
Sargent’s Women
Four Lives Behind the Canvas
by Donna M. Lucey
Based on original letters and diaries, Donna M. Lucey illuminates four extraordinary women painted by the iconic high-society portraitist John Singer Sargent.
Inventing Victoria
by Tonya Bolden
Essie, a young black woman in 1880s Savannah, is offered the opportunity to leave her shameful past and be transformed into an educated, high society woman in Washington, D.C.
The Girl in the Torch
by Robert Sharenow
After her father is killed in a pogrom, 12-year-old Sarah and her mother immigrate to America, but when her mother dies before they get through Ellis Island, and the authorities want to send her back to the old country, Sarah hides in the torch of the Statue of Liberty.
Conoce a Dulce María Loynaz
por Sergio Andricaín
Como Wharton, Dulce María Loynaz provenio de una familia de clase alta y persiguió sus metas intelectuales a pesar de las barreras que enfrentaban las mujeres en ese epoca. Se convirtió en una de las poetas más amabas de Cuba y leída por todo el mundo.
Selection for May 25
In the Event of Contact
by Ethel Rohan
A collection of short stories depicting characters profoundly affected by physical connection, or its lack.
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Everyone Dies Famous in a Small Town
by Bonnie-Sue Hitchcock
Each story in Hitchcock’s collection connects the lives of young people from small towns in Alaska and across the American West.
Look Both Ways
A Tale Told in Ten Blocks
by Jason Reynolds
A collection of 10 short stories that all take place in the same day about kids walking home from school.
Braving the Wilderness
by Brene Brown
Brown redefines what it means to truly belong in an age of increased polarization.
Tell me more
Stories About the 12 Hardest things I’m Learning to Say
by Kelly Corrigan
A funny, wise and insightful exploration of seven sentences adult life requires. Each chapter draws from the author’s sometimes ridiculous, sometimes profound struggles with parenting and marriage, career and friendship, illness, aging and mortality.
La Piel Insomne
por Mauricio Montiel Figueiras
Estos cuentos despliegan la prosa que caracteriza la apuesta del escritor: una sinuosa realidad plagada de laberintos, presencias amenazantes o sensuales que amenazan con cambiar el mundo, tramas que nos llevan a descubrir la oscuridad que habita en cada cosa y ser que habita el universo. Cuentos cortos en español, de México.
Palomillas de la noche y otros relatos
por Helena María Viramontes
Los prejuicios y el estatus social y económico de los chicanos a menudo forman el telón de fondo de estas historias inquietantes, pero el tema central son los valores sociales y culturales que dan forma a la vida de las mujeres y contra los cuales luchan con diversos grados de éxito.
The land of big numbers
by Te-Ping Chen
Brought to life through this highly recommended audiobook, a story collection from an extraordinary new talent that vividly gives voice to the men and women of modern China and its diaspora.
Selection for May 18
Miracle Country
by Kendra Atleework
One family’s spirit and losses in a harsh landscape that has been shaped and exploited over hundreds of years.
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Late Migrations
A Natural History of Love and Loss
by Margaret Renkl
Growing up in Alabama, Renkl was a devoted reader, an explorer of riverbeds and red-dirt roads, and a fiercely loved daughter. Here, in brief essays, she traces a tender and honest portrait of her complicated parents and the bittersweet moments that accompany a child’s transition to caregiver.
Nature Noir
A Park Ranger’s Patrol in the Sierra
by Jordan Fisher Smith
An intensely original story – part Edward Abbey, part James Ellroy – of the author’s 14 years as a park ranger on 48 miles of Sierra Nevada river canyons.
Mountain Dog
by Margarita Engle
When his mother is sent to jail in Los Angeles, 11-year-old Tony goes to live with his forest ranger great-uncle in the Sierra Nevada Mountains, where Tony experiences unconditional love for the first time through his friendship with a rescue dog.
The Distance Between Us
(Young Readers Edition)
by Reyna Grande
Award-winning author Reyna Grande shares her personal experience of crossing borders and cultures in this middle grade adaptation of her memoir, The Distance Between.
Deep Creek
finding hope in the high country
by Pam Houston
“How do we become who we are in the world? We ask the world to teach us,” Pam Houston writes. On her 120-acre homestead high in the Colorado Rockies, this beloved writer learns what it means to care for a piece of land and the creatures on it.
Mamá
por Jorge Fernández Díaz
En los límites de la crónica periodística, el relato confesional y la biografía íntima, Mamá narra las aventuras, pequeñas alegrías y sinsabores de una mujer común de clase media que bien podría ser la madre o la abuela de cualquier lector, y que plantea el gran dilema actual y de todos los tiempos: irse o quedarse.
¿De dónde eres?
por Yamile Saied Méndez
Cuando se le pregunta a una chica de dónde es, de dónde es realmente, ninguna de sus respuestas parece ser la correcta. Sin estar segura de cómo responder, se dirige a su abuelo amoroso en busca de ayuda. Él no le da la respuesta que ella espera. Le da una aún mejor.
La casa de los ángeles rotos
por Luis Alberto Urrea
Esta es la historia de Angelote y Angelín, de lo que implica ser mexicano en Estados Unidos, haber vivido dos vidas y cruzado una frontera, y sobre cómo la muerte hace emerger las partes de tu vida que habías olvidado, haya sido o no por elección propia.
Selection for May 11
Second Place
by Rachel Cusk
A woman invites a famous artist to use her guesthouse in the remote coastal landscape where she lives with her family. But as a long, dry summer sets in, his provocative presence disrupts the calm of her secluded household.
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Self Portrait with Boy
by Rachel Lion
A compulsively readable and electrifying debut about an ambitious young female artist who accidentally photographs a boy falling to his death—an image that could jumpstart her career, but would also devastate her most intimate friendship.
Leave the World Behind
by Rumaan Alam
Amanda and Clay head to a remote corner of Long Island for a vacation with their teenager children in the luxurious home they've rented for the week. The houseowners arrive in the middle of the night saying a blackout has swept the city. With no TV, internet or cell phone service, is the vacation home a safe place for their families? And are they safe from one other?
(Print book, large print Book, Book on CD, eBook, eAudiobook)
Open Water
by Caleb Nelson
A stunning first novel about two young Black artists in London falling in and out of love.
Private Lessons
by Cynthia Salaysay
Seventeen-year-old Claire Alalay likes herself best when she plays her father's old piano. Claire auditions for Paul Avon, a prominent piano teacher, who agrees to take Claire as a pupil. Soon Claire loses herself in Paul's world and his way of digging into a composition's emotional core. She practices constantly, foregoing a social life, but no matter how hard she works, it seems impossible to gain Paul's approval, let alone his affection.
mass production of prints of big-eyed kids, and used his marketing savvy to sell them cheaply. Unfortunately, he claimed to be the artist. That role was played by Margaret, his shy wife.
(DVD)
Someone Else's Shoes
by Ellen Wittlinger
Twelve-year-old Izzy is upset by her father's new marriage and a new baby on the way. She is expected to look out for her ten-year-old cousin, Oliver, who has moved in with her family; and now Ben, the rebellious sixteen-year-old son of Izzy's mother's boyfriend, is also living with them. But when Oliver's father disappears, the three children put aside their differences and set out on a road trip to find him.
The Pixels of Paul Cezanne
And Reflections on other Artists
by Wim Wenders
Observations and reflections on the fellow artists who have influenced, shaped, and inspired the author. How are they doing it? He finds the answer by writing about them, trying to understand their individual perspective, and, in the process revealing his own art of perception.
Fierce Poise
Helen Frankenthaler
and 1950s New York
by Alexander Nemerov
A dazzling biography of one of the twentieth century's most respected painters, Helen Frankenthaler, as she came of age as both an artist and a woman in the vibrant art world of 1950s New York.
Selection for May 4
Right Back Where We Started From
by Joy Lanzendorfer
A sweeping, multigenerational work of fiction that explores the lust for ambition that entered into the American consciousness during the Gold Rush and how it affected our nation’s ideas of success, failure, and the pursuit of happiness.
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The Far River
by Barbara Wood
For as long as anyone could remember, the Schallers and the Newmans had been enemies. When the skeletal remains of a victim of foul play are discovered at the Schaller estate, a decades-old feud between the rival winemaking families is reignited and dark secrets begin to see the light of day.
Frontier Grit
The Unlikely True Stories of Daring Pioneer Women
by Marianne Monson
The stories of 12 women who “heard the call” to settle the west and who came from all points of the globe to begin their journey. Many were crusaders for social justice and women’s rights. All endured hardships, overcame obstacles, broke barriers, and changed the world.
Muñecas chinas
por Lisa See
Es 1938 en San Francisco: se prepara una feria mundial en Treasure Island, una guerra se está gestando en el extranjero, y la ciudad está llena de posibilidades. Grace, Helen, y Ruby, tres mujeres jóvenes de muy diferentes orígenes, se conocen por casualidad en el exclusivo club nocturno Ciudad Prohibida.
Daughter of Moloka’i
by Alan Brennert
Rachel Kalama was quarantined for most of her life at the isolated leprosy settlement and forced to give up her daughter, who is adopted by a Japanese couple and raised on a farm in California. After World War II, the daughter receives a letter from Rachel. As the two meet and come to love one another, she discovers a past she knew nothing about.
Esperanza Rising
by Pam Muñoz Ryan
Esperanza and her mother are forced to leave their life of wealth and privilege in Mexico to work in the labor camps of Southern California, where they must adapt to the harsh circumstances facing Mexican farmworkers on the eve of the Great Depression.
(Print book, large print book, book on CD, eBook, eAudiobook)
Between Before & After
by Maureen McQuerry
Fourteen-year-old Molly worries about school, friends, and her parents’ failed marriage, but mostly about her mother Elaine’s growing depression. As Molly digs into her mother’s past, she finds a secret hidden in her mother’s dresser that may be the key to unlocking a family mystery dating to 1918 New York – a secret that could save or destroy their future.
Dancing in the Dark
A Cultural History of the Great Depression
by Morris Dickstein
Shows how our worst economic crisis in the 1930s eroded American individualism and punctured the American dream, but produced some of the greatest writing, photography, and mass entertainment ever seen in this country.
La búsqueda de un sueño
una autobiografía
por Reyna Grande
Como Right Back Where We Started From, esta es una historia de la determinación de una mujer de seguir sus sueños, en una California que promete oportunidades y presenta obstáculos en igual medida.
Selection for April 27
Empire of Pain: The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty
by Patrick Radden Keefe
A portrait of three generations of the Sackler family, who built their fortune on the sale of Valium and later sponsored the creation and marketing of one of the most commonly prescribed and addictive painkillers of the opioid crisis.
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Long Bright River
by Liz Moore
A suspense novel that also looks at the anatomy of a Philadelphia family rocked by the opioid crisis and the relationship between two sisters – one, suffering from addiction, who has suddenly gone missing amid a series of mysterious murders; the other a police officer who patrols the neighborhood from which she disappeared.
(Print book, large print book, book on CD, eBook, eAudiobook)
Dopesick
Dealers, doctors, and the drug company that addicted America
by Beth Macy
Chronicles America’s more than 20-year struggle with opioid addiction, from the introduction of OxyContin in 1996, through the spread of addiction in distressed communities in Central Appalachia, to the current national crisis
(Print book, large print book, book on CD, eBook, eAudiobook)
Cherry
by Nico Walker
Rashly marrying his college girlfriend to keep their relationship active during his tour of duty, a college dropout turned soldier is overwhelmed by the realities of war, PTSD and opioid addiction before forging a desperate plan.
El traidor
el diario secreto del hijo del Mayo
por Anabel Hernández
La autora se adentra en el Cártel de Sinaloa a través del relato de Vicentillo, quien exhibe de manera descarnada cómo funciona el sistema interno que da vida a la organización criminal, la violencia, las mil formas de traficar droga y la complicidad entre políticos, empresarios y fuerzas del orden. Pero sobre todo devela el perfil de quien durante el último medio siglo ha sido el rey del narcotráfico. Quien nunca ha pisado la cárcel y quien desde su trono ha visto caer a amigos, enemigos, socios, competidores, familiares, empleados del gobierno y hasta sus propios hijos, sin que eso haga mella en su poder, el padre de Vicentillo: Ismael el Mayo Zambada.
Big Pharma and the Opioid Epidemic
From Vicodin to Heroin
by Eric Braun
Learn how the nation is trying to deal with the opioid crisis and discover practical tips on how to help someone suffering from an addiction.
Dig
by A.S. King
Only a generation removed from simple Pennsylvania potato farmers, Gottfried and Marla Hemmings managed to trade digging spuds for developing subdivisions and now sit atop a seven-figure bank account, wealth they've declined to pass on to their adult children or their teenage grandchildren. Now the five teenagers are lost in a tangled maze of family secrets. One of the teens sells pot; one has cancer; all are estranged from the family. As they come together for Easter dinner, will they be able to find their ways back to each other?
Bottle of Lies
The Inside Story of the Generic Drug Boom
by Katherine Eban
Drawing on exclusive accounts from whistleblowers and regulators, as well as thousands of pages of confidential FDA documents, Eban reveals an industry where fraud is rampant, companies routinely falsify data, and executives circumvent almost every principle of safe manufacturing to minimize cost and maximize profit, confident in their ability to fool inspectors. Meanwhile, patients unwittingly consume medicine with unpredictable and dangerous effects.
La nueva guerra
del Chapo al fentanilo
por Jorge Fernández Menéndez
La guerra contra el narco, la alternancia en los gobiernos de México y Estados Unidos, la captura y extradición de capos, la atomización de cárteles, el surgimiento de nuevos líderes, las fluctuaciones del mercado nacional e internacional y la evolución en el tráfico y consumo de estupefacientes han creado un nuevo México, que atraviesa la mayor crisis de violencia en 80 años.
Laberinto
por Eduardo Antonio Parra
Esta novela es un brillante artificio literario, un laberinto de ecos y, a la vez, el implacable testimonio de la desolación que la voracidad del narcotráfico ha sembrado en el norte de nuestro país.
Selection for April 20
Who is Maud Dixon?
by Alexandra Andrews
A stylish psychological thriller about how far into the darkness you're willing to go to claim the life you always wanted.
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Released in 1975, this film explores the temptations and perils of a reporter assuming the identity of a dead man. Set in Africa, it also touches on issues of post-colonial poverty and military conflicts.
(DVD)
The Death of Mrs. Westaway
by Ruth Ware
On a day that begins like any other, Hal receives a mysterious letter bequeathing her a substantial inheritance. She realizes very quickly that the letter was sent to the wrong person – but also that the cold-reading skills she's honed as a tarot card reader might help her claim the money. Soon, Hal finds herself at the funeral of the deceased, but there is something very, very wrong about this strange situation and the inheritance at the center of it.
(Print book, large print book, book on CD, eBook, eAudiobook)
My Salinger Year
by Joanna Smith Rakoff
A coming-of-age memoir about an aspiring writer's entry-level job at a fading literary agency where her boss’ main responsibility was the non-business of J.D. Salinger.
Vanity Fair Profiles
of Women by Women
by Radhika Jones with David Friend
An imminently enjoyable collection of profiles from the 1980s to the present such as Whoopi Goldberg, Tina Fey, Cher, Tina Turner, Emily Post and Frida Kahlo. A perfect book for dipping into when something longer and more involved would be too much.
I Killed Zoe Spanos
by Kit Frick
Working as a nanny in the Hamptons before starting college, Anna learns of her weird connection to a missing girl. After she confesses to manslaughter, a podcast producer isn't satisfied. Can her podcast uncover the truth?
When Life Gives You Mangos
by Kereen Getten
Twelve-year-old Clara lives on an island that visitors call exotic. But the only thing out of the ordinary for Clara is that something happened to her memory that made her forget everything that happened last summer after a hurricane hit. But this summer is going to be different. A new girl in the village is about to make big waves on the island – and give Clara a summer she won't forget.
The Talented Mr. Ripley
by Patricia Highsmith
Unusual circumstances transform Tom Ripley from a petty con man into a suave, amoral criminal, who will stop at nothing – even murder – to achieve his goals.
Selection for April 13
Driven Out
The Forgotten War against Chinese Americans
by Jean Pfaelzer
Presents the shocking and violent history of ethnic cleansing against Chinese Americans from the Gold Rush era to the turn of the century.
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The White Devil's Daughters
The Fight Against Slavery in San Francisco's Chinatown
by Julia Flynn Siler
Starting in the mid-19th century, Chinese immigrants arrived in California to participate in the Gold Rush and work on the Transcontinental Railroad. The vast majority were men. A lucrative human trafficking operation developed that smuggled Chinese women and girls to the United States, forcing them to work in brothels or as domestic servants. This is the story of the Occidental Mission Home, established in San Francisco in 1874, that worked to free these women.
How much of these hills is gold
by C Pam Zhang
Two orphaned Chinese immigrant siblings flee the threats of their gold rush mining town across an unforgiving landscape where their survival is tested by family secrets, sibling rivalry and disparate goals.
Paper Son
Lee’s Journey to America
by Helen Foster James and Virginia Shin-Mui Loh; illustrated by Wilson Ong
Twelve-year-old Lee, an orphan, reluctantly leaves his grandparents in China for the long sea voyage to San Francisco, where he and other immigrants undergo examinations at Angel Island Immigration Station.
The Fortunes
by Peter Ho Davies
Four interlinked stories examine the Chinese-American experience from the 19th century to the present. Like The Welsh Girl, author Peter Ho Davies’ debut novel, The Fortunes sensitively explores issues of identity and belonging.
The Poker Bride
The First Chinese in the Wild West
by Christopher Corbett
Polly, a young Chinese concubine, accompanied her owner to a mining camp in the highlands of Idaho. After he lost her in a poker game, Polly found her way with her new owner to an isolated ranch on the banks of the Salmon River. As the Gold Rush receded, it took with it the Chinese miners, but left behind Polly, who would make headlines when she emerged from the Idaho hills nearly half a century later to visit a modern city and tell her story.
Paper Daughters of Chinatown
by Heather Moore
Donaldina Cameron arrived at the Occidental Mission Home for Girls in 1895 intending to teach sewing skills to young Chinese women immigrants. She discovers that the job is much more complicated than perfect stitches and even hems. A fictionalized account of the early years of Cameron's work.
The Chinese in America
A narrative history
by Iris Chang
Chang takes a fresh look at what it means to be an American and draws a complex portrait of the many accomplishments of the Chinese in their adopted country, from building the transcontinental railroad to major scientific and technological advances. A saga of human tenacity and a testament to the determination of a people to forge an identity in a strange land.
The Dragon's Child
A Story of Angel Island
by Laurence Yep
Ten-year-old Gim Lew leaves his village in China to accompany his father to America, but before they go he must prepare for a grueling test that he must pass – without stuttering – at California's Angel Island. Includes facts about immigration from China and the experiences of the author’s family.
Last Night at the Telegraph Club
by Malinda Lo
Seventeen-year-old Lily Hu can't remember exactly when the question took root, but the answer was in full bloom the moment she and Kathleen Miller walked under the flashing neon sign of a lesbian bar called the Telegraph Club. America in 1954 is not a safe place for two girls to fall in love, especially not in Chinatown. With deportation looming over her father – despite his hard-won citizenship – Lily and Kath risk everything to let their love see the light of day.
Selection for April 6
Wild Women and the Blues
by Denny S. Bryce
A historical fiction novel that weaves the stories of a grieving film student in 2015 and an ambitious chorus girl in 1925 in a tale of history, love, and secrets that only family can define.
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Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiments
Intimate Histories of Riotous Black Girls, Troublesome Women, and Queer Radicals
by Saidiya V. Hartman
Reconstructs the lives of unknown black female urban rebels from the early 20th Century, everyday women whose existences are hinted at by court records, social workers’ notes, and photographs.
A Black Women's History of the United States
by Daina Berry Ramey
A compact introduction to the history of black women in America, rooted in everyday heroism and how black women have significantly shaped our nation.
Struttin' With Some Barbecue
Lil Hardin Armstrong Becomes the First Lady of Jazz
by Patricia Hruby Powell
This is the true story of Lil Hardin Armstrong: pianist, composer, and bandleader in the early days of jazz.
Jazz Owls
A Novel of the Zoot Suit Riots
by Margarita Engle
In early 1940s Los Angeles, Mexican-Americans Marisela and Lorena work in canneries all day, then jitterbug with sailors all night with their zoot suit-wearing younger brother, Ray, as escort until the night racial violence leads to murder.
The Wicked City
by Beatriz Williams
Moving into the building that once hid a speakeasy, Ella Hawthorne uncovers the Jazz Age story of a scandalous love triangle involving redheaded flapper Gin Kelly, a rugged Prohibition agent, and a wealthy debonair Princetonian.
The Given Day
by Dennis Lehane
An unflinching family epic that captures the political unrest of a nation at the end of World War I, caught between a well-patterned past and an unpredictable future.
1919
by Eve L. Ewing
In 1919, award-winning poet Eve L. Ewing explores the story of this event--which lasted eight days and resulted in 38 deaths and almost 500 injuries – through poems recounting the stories of everyday people trying to survive and thrive in the city.
Selection for March 23
Vera
by Carol Edgarian
A grand adventure set in 1906 San Francisco—a city leveled by quake and fire—featuring an indomitable heroine coming of age in the aftermath of catastrophe and her quest for love and reinvention.
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Outrun the Moon
by Stacey Lee
Fifteen-year-old Mercy Wong is determined to break from poverty in Chinatown, and she gains admittance to a prestigious finishing school through a mix of cunning and bribery. When the earthquake strikes on April 18, Mercy and her classmates are forced to a survivor encampment, but her quick-witted leadership rallies them to help in the tragedy's aftermath.
The Nature of Fragile Things
by Susan Meissner
Moving to early 20th Century San Francisco to escape New York tenement life, an Irish mail-order bride uncovers transformative secrets involving a silent child and two other women before her precarious existence is upended by the great earthquake of 1906.
A Crack in the Edge of the World
America and the Great California Earthquake of 1906
by Simon Winchester
An exploration of not only what happened in Northern California in 1906, but what we have learned since about the geological underpinnings that caused the earthquake in the first place.
How Much of these Hills is Gold
by Pam Zhang
Two orphaned Chinese immigrant siblings flee the threats of their gold rush mining town across an unforgiving landscape where their survival is tested by family secrets, sibling rivalry and disparate goals.
San Francisco is Burning
The Untold Story of the 1906 Earthquake and Fires
by Dennis Smith
Told through the stories of the people who lived through it, Smith reveals many unknown details from the city's great vulnerability to fire due to its corrupt building practices, to the widespread racism the quake unleashed and the atrocities committed by national guard members.
Hija de la Fortuna
por Isabel Allende
Una trama de una saga familiar, ambientada en la mitad del siglo XIX, y que viaja entre Chile y California a causa de la fiebre del oro. Sus personajes viajan entre la narración de Allende, para posarse poco a poco en la retina del lector.
El terremoto de San Francisco, 1906
by por Lauren Tarshis
A Leo le gusta ser repartidor de periódicos en San Francisco. Es un lugar en el que todo parece posible. Sin embargo, una mañana de primavera, esto cambia de repente. El mundo de Leo se estremece, literalmente, y el chico se halla solo en medio de la ciudad mientras esta se quema. ¿Podrá Leo sobrevivir este devastador desastre?
Lily and the Great Quake
by Veeda Bybee
Lily is the oldest of three children in her Chinese American family living in San Francisco when the 1906 earthquake hits. Her family survives the quake, but as the city starts to burn Lily and her younger brother are separated from the others and must get to the safety of Oakland and hope that the rest of their family and friends are there waiting for them.
Selection for March 16
Anne Brigman: The Photographer of Enchantment
by Kathleen Pyne
Pyne traces the groundbreaking photographer’s life from Hawaii to the Sierra and elsewhere in California, revealing how her photographs emerged from her experience of local place and cultural politics.
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The Age of Light
by Whitney Scharer
Inspired by the life of the Vogue model-turned-renowned photographer, Lee Miller relocates to 1929 Paris, where she becomes the muse and colleague of the mercurial Surrealist, Man Ray.
Through a lens darkly
black photographers and the emergence of a people
A cornucopia of Americana that reveals deeply disturbing truths about the history of race relations while expressing joyous, life-affirming sentiments about the ability of artists and amateurs alike to assert their identity through the photographic lens
(DVD)
Photographic:
The Life of Graciela Iturbide
by Isabel Quintero, illustrated by Zeke Peña
A symbolic, poetic, and deeply personal graphic biography of an iconic photographer. Iturbide's journey will excite readers of all ages as well as budding photographers.
Group f.64:
Edward Weston, Ansel Adams, Imogen Cunningham, and the Community of Artists who Revolutionized American photography
by Mary Street Alinder
Revolutionary in their day, a group of San Francisco Bay Area photographers formed Group f.64, considered one of the first modern art movements equally defined by women. Local author, Mary Street Adlinder, and former assistant to Ansel Adams, Alinder knew most of the artists featured. Featuring 50 photographs by and of its members: Ansel Adams, Imogen Cunningham, Dorothea Lange, Willard Van Dyke and Edward Weston.
Jamel Shabazz street photographer
In the infancy of hip-hop, Brooklyn-born photographer Jamel Shabazz documented the pioneers of music and style who would launch an enduring worldwide phenomenon. Director Charlie Ahearn pays tribute to both Shabazz and those who defined hip-hop before it had definition.
(DVD)
Mary Coin
by Marisa Silver
An extraordinary tale from a brief moment in history, and reminds us that although a great photograph can capture the essence of a moment, it only scratches the surface of a life.
Graciela Iturbide's Mexico: Photographs
by Graciela Iturbide
Graciela Iturbide is a photographer known for her black-and-white images of local people in her native country of Mexico. She most often depicts women, believing them to embody independence and sexuality. In 1979 she notably published Juchitán de las Mujeres, a book of photographs which inspired her lifelong support of feminist causes.
La Fiesta y la Rebelión
por Antonio Turok
Antonio Turok nació en 1955 en la Ciudad de México. A los diecisiete años llegó a Chiapas, donde vivió veinticinco años y comenzó su carrera fotográfica. Fue corresponsal en Nicaragua, El Salvador y Guatemala en la década de 1980. Fue el primer fotógrafo en dar cuenta del levantamiento zapatista, y más tarde, en Oaxaca, fotografió el movimiento de la APPO. Estuvo en Nueva York el 11 de septiembre de 2001 y ha tomado imágenes de los mexicanos en Estados Unidos y de la crisis industrial del Medio Oeste.
Meet Cindy Sherman:
Artist, Photographer, Chameleon
by Jan Greenberg and Sandra Jordan
Infusing the narrative with Sherman's photographs, as well as children's first impressions of the photographs, this is a biography that goes beyond birth, middle age, and later life. It's a look at how we look at art.
Selection for March 9
Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro
The story of Klara, an Artificial Friend with outstanding observational qualities, who, from her place in the store, watches carefully the behavior of those who come in to browse, and of those who pass on the street outside. She remains hopeful that a customer will soon choose her.
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Exhalation
by Ted Chiang
In these nine stunningly original, provocative, and poignant stories, Chiang tackles some of humanity's oldest questions along with new quandaries only he could imagine.
Our Robots, Ourselves:
Robotics and the Myths of Autonomy
by David Mindell
Mindell offers a fascinating behind-the-scenes look at the cutting edge of robotics today, debunking commonly held myths and exploring the rapidly changing relationships between humans and machines.
Machines Like Me
by Ian McEwan
Presents the story of two lovers in an alternative 1980s London who construct a perfect synthetic human before finding themselves in a morally complex love triangle.
(Print book, large type book, eBook, eAudiobook, book on CD)
La ciudad que nos unió
por N.K. Jemison
Jemisin, la tres veces ganadora del Premio Hugo a la mejor novela y superventas del New York Times, nos trae La ciudad que nos unió, una historia revolucionaria de cultura, magia y mitos en la Nueva York actual.
The Innovators:
How a Group of Inventors, Hackers, Geniuses, and Geeks Created the Digital Revolution
by Walter Isaacson
What were the talents that allowed certain inventors and entrepreneurs to turn their visionary ideas into disruptive realities? In his masterly saga, Isaacson begins with Ada Lovelace, Lord Byron’s daughter, who pioneered computer programming in the 1840s. He explores the fascinating personalities who created our current digital revolution, such as Alan Turing, John von Neumann, Robert Noyce, Steve Wozniak, Steve Jobs, Tim Berners-Lee, and Larry Page.
The Kingdom
by Jess Rothenberg
The Kingdom is an immersive fantasy theme park where guests soar on virtual dragons, castles loom like giants, and bioengineered species roam free. Ana is one of seven Fantasists, beautiful “princesses” engineered to make dreams come true. When she meets park employee Owen, Ana begins to experience emotions beyond her programming including, for the first time ... love. When Ana is accused of murdering Owen, it ignites the trial of the century, uncovering a tale of love, lies, and cruelty – and what it truly means to be human.
SAM:
One Robot, a Dozen Engineers, and the Race to Revolutionize the Way We Build
by Jonathan Waldman
A true story of innovation, centered on a scrappy team of engineers and their quest to achieve a surprisingly difficult technological feat: building a robot that can lay bricks. SAM unfolds as an engineering drama, full of trials and setbacks, heated showdowns between meticulous scientists and brash bricklayers, and hard-earned milestone achievements.
Friendroid
by M. M. Vaughan
Told through journal entries, 12-year-old Danny and his best friend Slick recount how their friendship begins and when they discover Slick’s true identity and ultimate fate.
Selection for March 3
Between Two Kingdoms by Suleika Jaouad
An Emmy Award-winning writer and activist describes the harrowing years she spent in early adulthood fighting leukemia and how she learned to live again while forging connections with other survivors of profound illness and suffering.
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American Road Trip
by Patrick Flores-Scott
A road trip novel that explores the bonds of family, growing up, living through trauma and recovery.
Everything Happens for a Reason: And Other Lies I've Loved
by Kate Bowler
A divinity professor at Duke University found her life turned upside down in her mid-30s with a diagnosis of stage 4 colon cancer. Here, she chronicles her journey from what seemed a death sentence to surviving as a result of the effects of a clinical trial and a stalwart community of friends and family.
From Scratch
by Tembi Locke
A memoir of grief, love, food and home, narrated by the author in lyrical English and Italian.
No Time Like the Future: An Optimist Considers Mortality
by Michael J. Fox
In his fourth book, Fox expresses gratitude for the past and looks to the future with a firm grasp on how to be “both a realist and an optimist.” A moving account of resilience, hope, fear and mortality, and how these things resonate in our lives.
Halfway Normal
by Barbara Dee
Twelve-year-old cancer survivor Norah struggles to fit in at middle school after two years of treatment, but she finds her voice with the help of new friend Griffin, who shares her love of mythology.
Finding Balance
by Kati Gardner
Teenage cancer survivors Mari and Jase have flirted for years at Camp Chemo, but when she transfers to his high school their different approaches to their history cause trouble.
All the Water in the World
by Karen Raney
Sixteen-year-old Maddy, who has cancer, grapples with her first romantic relationship, searches for the father she has never met, and tests the limits of her relationship with her mother, all while facing an uncertain future.
We Own the Sky
by Luke Allnutt
When a devastating illness takes his beloved family from him, a man who once believed himself incredibly lucky takes solace in photographing the skyscrapers and cliff tops his son and he once visited before embarking on a powerful journey through forgiveness back to life.
Selection for February 23
Sharks in the Time of Saviors by Kawai Strong Washburn
In 1995 in Kailua-Kona, Hawaii, on a rare family vacation, 7-year-old Nainoa Flores falls overboard a cruise ship into the Pacific Ocean. When a shiver of sharks appears in the water, everyone fears for the worst. But instead, Noa is gingerly delivered to his mother in the jaws of a shark, marking his story as the stuff of legends.
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Maya’s Notebook
by Isabel Allende
To escape a life of drugs, crime and prostitution, 19-year-old Maya Vidal flees California to a remote island off the west coast of Chile.
(Print book, large type book, eBook, eAudiobook, book on CD)
Ricky is a kid in foster care who lands at a new home, only for tragedy to strike, causing him to head out on his own. But the friends he makes along the way have him discovering what family, identity and home really mean for the first time. A tender and often hilarious story with unforgettable characters.
Little Fires Everywhere
by Celeste Ng
In Shaker Heights, a placid, progressive suburb of Cleveland, everything is planned. And no one embodies this spirit more than Elena Richardson, whose guiding principle is playing by the rules. Enter Mia Warren – an enigmatic artist and single mother – who arrives in this idyllic bubble with her teenaged daughter Pearl, and rents a house from the Richardsons. But Mia carries with her a mysterious past and a disregard for the status quo that threatens to upend this carefully ordered community.
(Print book, large type book, eBook, eAudiobook, book on CD)
Dominicana
by Angie Cruz
Coral Pena narrates Cruz’ story of Ana’s fraught marriage, migration to the US and her struggles to support and honor her family back home in the Dominican Republic. The story is equal parts coming of age, an exploration of migration and identity, and a meditation on family ties.
The Path Made Clear: Discovering Your Life’s Direction and Purpose
by Oprah Winfrey
Everyone has a purpose. According to Oprah Winfrey, “Your real job in life is to figure out as soon as possible what that is, who you are meant to be, and begin to honor your calling in the best way possible.” That journey starts right here.
All of Us With Wings
by Michelle Ruiz Keil
Seventeen-year-old Xochi’s life changed when she became governess to precocious 12-year-old Pallas, but the duo unintentionally summons a pair of ancient creatures determined to right the wrongs of Xochi’s adolescence.
For the Time Being
by Annie Dillard
A compassionate, informative, and enthralling personal narrative that surveys the meaning and significance of life, from Pulitzer-winner Dillard.
Gabi, Fragmentos de una adolescente
Por Isabel Quintero. Gabi Hernández está en su último año de la preparatoria. Para entretenerse, escribe todo lo que le pasa en su diario: las solicitudes a las universidades, el embarazo de Cindy, cuando Sebastián salió del clóset, los chicos guapos de su clase, la adicción de su padre a la metanfetamina, y toda la comida que se le antoja. Pero lo mejor de todo lo que escribe es la poesía que la ayuda a ser quien es.
The Lightning Queen
by Laua Resau
On the Hill of Dust, in the remote mountains of Mexico, an 11-year-old Mixtec boy called Teo lives with his family and the animals that he has healed, but one day a Romany caravan rolls into town with a young girl who calls herself Esma, the Gypsy Queen of Lightning – it is the beginning of a life-long friendship that will change both their lives.
Selection for February 16
Citizen Reporters by Stephanie Gorton
A fascinating history of the rise and fall of influential Gilded Age magazine McClure’s and the two unlikely outsiders at its helm – and a timely, full-throated defense of investigative journalism in America.
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The Race for Paris
by Meg Waite Clayton
Determined to be the first photographer to capture images of Paris’ liberation from the Nazis, Liv defies orders and teams up with a fellow woman reporter and a British photojournalist to race to Paris ahead of Allied forces.
The Jungle
by Upton Sinclair
As Stephanie Gorton reveals in Citizen Reporters, McClure’s magazine was instrumental in paving the way for reporters to battle corruption and drive change in society. Read another example of groundbreaking investigative journalism with this title in which the horrifying conditions of the Chicago stockyards are revealed through this narrative of a young immigrant’s struggles in America.
We Say #Never Again: Reporting by the Parkland Student Journalists
edited by MSD teachers Melissa Falkowski and Eric Garner
This collection of essays looks at the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland and the fight for gun control – as told by the student reporters for the school’s newspaper and TV station.
Creem: America’s only rock 'n' roll magazine
Capturing the messy upheaval of the ‘70s just as rock was re-inventing itself, the documentary explores the publication’s humble beginnings, follows its upward trajectory from underground paper to national powerhouse, then bears witness to its imminent demise following the tragic and untimely deaths of its visionary publisher, Barry Kramer, and its most famous alum and genius clown prince, Lester Bangs, a year later.
(DVD)
In Extremis: The Life and Death of the War Correspondent Marie
by Lindsey Hilsum
American journalist Marie Colvin’s experiences at the front lines of war zones in this inspiring, vivid biography.
Are You Somebody: The Accidental Memoir of a Dublin Woman
by Nuala O’Faolain
O’Faolain, a journalist for the Irish Times, was asked to collect her columns for publication, but the introduction she sat down to write eventually expanded into this beautifully cadenced and moving memoir.
Ida M. Tarbell: The Woman Who Challenged Big Business – and Won!
by Emily Arnold McCully
Tarbell investigated and published works about the Standard Oil Trust for McClure’s Magazine that informed the world of shady business dealings and skyrocketed her into the public eye.
La Ira de México: Siete voces contra la impunidad.
por Lydia Cacho, Sergio González Rodríguez, Anabel Hernández, Diego Enrique Osorno, Emiliano Ruiz Parra, Marcela Turati, Juan Villoro
Siete destacados periodistas mexicanos comparten relatos de víctimas de la violencia, corrupción, y violaciones de derechos humanos en México hoy en día. México continua ser uno de los países más peligrosos de ser periodista, y esas voces son feroces e importantes.
Selection for February 9
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes by Anita Loos
Meet 1920s flapper Lorelei Lee, aka Mabel Minnow from Little Rock, Arkansas. She has it all: a millionaire “benefactor,” a lavish lifestyle, and dazzling good looks. The problem is she may be falling in love with a man who is temporarily married—and permanently poor.
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Flappers: Six Women of a Dangerous Generation
by Judith Mackrell
A biography of six women who declared their independence during the Jazz Age. British heiresses Diana Cooper and Nancy Cunard, Russian artist Tamara de Lempicka, African-American entertainer Josephine Baker, actress Tallulah Bankhead and aspiring writer Zelda Fitzgerald were daring women who defied expectations about what a woman's life should be.
Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries
A thoroughly entertaining Australian TV series about an unflappable woman detective solving crimes and righting wrongs in the backrooms of jazz clubs and speakeasies in 1920s Melbourne.
(DVD)
Jazz Moon
by Joe Okonkwo
Ben is a Harlem Renaissance poet swept up in the scene and winds up in Paris. This powerful debut novel explores tensions of race and class against the backdrop of the profoundly important cultural scene of the Harlem Renaissance and Jazz Age Paris.
The Wicked City
by Beatriz Williams
Moving into the building that once hid a speakeasy, Ella Hawthorne uncovers the Jazz Age story of a scandalous love triangle involving redheaded flapper Gin Kelly, a rugged Prohibition agent, and a wealthy debonair Princetonian.
Sex and Vanity
by Kevin Kwan
A more modern perspective on diamonds being a girl’s best friend. When George, the man with whom she had brief fling several years earlier, unexpectedly appears in East Hampton, newly engaged Lucie Churchill is drawn to him again and spins a web of deceit in an attempt to block him from her life – and her heart.
(Print book, book on CD, large type book, eBook, eAudiobook)
Flapper: The Notorious Life and Scandalous Times of the First Thoroughly Modern Woman
by Joshue Zeitz
An entertaining, well-researched and charmingly illustrated dissection of the 1920s flapper, who flouted conventions and epitomized the naughtiness of the Jazz Age as she “bobbed her hair, smoked cigarettes, drank gin, sported short skirts, and passed her evenings in steamy jazz clubs.”
Gods of Jade and Shadow
by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
The audiobook version of this novel, which NPR called a “best book of the year,” sparkles and crackles with the glitter of Jazz Age Mexico City and the power of Mayan gods. Yetta Gotteson narrates this book with careful skill, building out the characters’ force and energy as the story unfolds.
Speak Easy, Speak Love
by McKelle George
After she gets kicked out of boarding school, Beatrice goes to her uncle’s estate on Long Island. It’s a rundown old mansion, where Beatrice’s cousin, Hero, runs a struggling speakeasy out of the basement. As Beatrice and Hero throw all their efforts into planning a massive party to save the speakeasy, they are caught up in a romantic battle of wits that their friends might be quietly orchestrating in the background.
The Good Thieves
by Katherine Rundell
In 1920s New York City, a young girl with a deformed foot recruits her new friends, a female pickpocket and two circus performers, to help recover an emerald from her grandfather’s mansion in upstate New York after he loses his home to an unscrupulous tycoon.
Selection for February 2
A Swim in a Pond in the Rain by George Saunders
George Saunders guides the reader through seven classic Russian short stories he's been teaching for 20 years as a professor in the prestigious Syracuse University graduate MFA creative writing program. Paired with stories by Chekhov, Turgenev, Tolstoy, and Gogol, these essays are intended for anyone interested in how fiction works and why it's more relevant than ever in these turbulent times.
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Mud and Stars: Travels in Russia with Pushkin, Tolstoy, and other Geniuses of the Golden Age
by Sara Wheeler
Russian literature fans will appreciate these nonfiction works on what makes for great writing. A Swim in a Pond analyzes short stories by the greats; Mud and Stars travels around Russia exploring the environment that produced Tolstoy, Gogol, and Turgenev.
A Night in the Cemetery: and Other Stories of Crime and Suspense
by Anton Chekhov
Take a deeper dive into Chekhov and Russian literature with this short story collection. Though billed as featuring crime and suspense, the volume has a broad range, including morality tales and stories of both dark and puckish humor.
Stalin's Scribe: Literature, Ambition, and Survival: The Life of Mikhail Sholokhov
by Brian Boeck
Sholokhov was an obscure 21-year-old short story writer when he wrote his classic novel, And Quiet Flows the Don. The first two volumes were bestsellers, but in 1930, his editor regarded further installments as insufficiently pro-revolutionary. Sholokhov refused to make changes but agreed to visit Maxim Gorky, the nation's literary idol, to discuss the matter. To his amazement, the meeting included Stalin. Grilled on the controversy, Sholokhov satisfied Stalin, who considered himself a patron of the arts. He not only approved publication, but gave the author his personal secretary's phone number. Like naïve patriots throughout history, Sholokhov considered his ruler blameless but betrayed by evil underlings, and he remained a protégé, producing fawning speeches and writing that he struggled to repress after Stalin's death.
Aetherial Worlds: Stories
by by Tatyana Tolstaya
Praised by Nobel laureate Joseph Brodsky (1940–96) as “the most original, tactile, luminous voice in Russian prose,” Tolstaya, two decades on, is all that and more in this edgy, brash, slyly surreal, and mordantly funny short story collection, which begins with the sudden awakening of a woman’s literary imagination, an inherited gift.
A Gentleman in Moscow
by Amor Towles
This books guides the reader through Russian history and culture via the keenly observant eyes of a fallen member of the Russian aristocracy. The situations become more absurd and the characters more sympathetic as the story unfolds. Also in Spanish: Un caballero en Moscú.
(Print book, large type book, Spanish book, book on CD, eBook, eAudiobook)
Travels in Siberia
by Ian Frazier
Frazier himself narrates his account of his travels around Siberia, discovering the people, foods and history of the vast landscape. Humorous, informative and meditative at times, Frazier is a humble, self-deprecating guide to this land. An excellent road trip audiobook.
Diario de un joven médico
by Mikhail Bulgukov
Estas nueve narraciones muestran el nacimiento de la mente de un novelista, y son la materia prima que alimentó el surrealismo de la ficción posterior de Bulgákov.
Foreshadow: Stories to Celebrate the Magic of Reading and Writing YA
edited by Emily X. R. Pan and Nova Ren Suma
Presents an anthology of 13 short stories by contemporary young adult authors, ranging from fantasy to the experience of Mexican-Americans living in border cities. Each story is followed by an author's note, commentary by one of the editors on such topics as voice, imagery, and mood, and some, with story prompts.
Bookjoy, Wordjoy
by Pat Mora, illustrated by Raul Colon
An inspiring collection of the author's own glorious poems celebrating a love of words and all the ways we use and interact with them: reading, speaking, writing, singing, and storytelling.
Selection for January 26
When her favorite true-crime podcast host goes missing, an adrift young woman plunges headfirst into the wild backcountry of Northern California and her own dangerous obsession.
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Returning to her hometown after a long absence to investigate the murders of two girls, reporter Camille Preaker is reunited with her neurotic mother and enigmatic half-sister as she works to uncover the truth about the killings.
(Print book, large type book, Spanish book, eBook, eAudiobook, book on CD, DVD)
Lawyer Yolanda Vance becomes embroiled in espionage, activism, romance, and—you got it—a mysterious death that needs to be solved. De Leon’s spy thriller focuses on Vance’s rationale for wanting a comfortable life versus coming to terms with her own moral compass when working undercover for the FBI.
Struggling with memories over the loss of her own baby while investigating the discovery of an anonymous infant in the woods, journalist Molly Anderson traces a string of unreported assaults spanning 20 years.
I'll be Gone in the Dark: One Woman's Obsessive Search for the Golden State Killer
For more than 10 years, a mysterious and violent predator committed 50 sexual assaults in Northern California before moving south, where he perpetrated ten sadistic murders. Then he disappeared. Three decades later, true crime journalist Michelle McNamara was determined to find the violent psychopath.
(Print book, large type book, eBook, eAudiobook, book on CD)
Cooper expertly crafts a twisted web of murder, mystery, and misogyny as she researches Harvard student, Jane Britton, whose violent death 50 years earlier continued to fuel the school's rumor mill.
In her small town, 17-year-old Delia “Dee” Skinner is known as the girl who wasn't taken. Ten years ago, she witnessed the abduction of her best friend, Sibby. At night, Dee deals with her guilt by becoming someone else: the Seeker, the voice behind the popular true crime podcast Radio Silent, which features missing persons cases and works with online sleuths to solve them.
The Unexplainable Disappearance of Mars Patel
Mars Patel’s friend Aurora has disappeared! His teachers are clueless. His mom is stressed out about her jobs. But Mars refuses to give up – after all, his own dad disappeared when Mars was a toddler. The clues seem to point toward eccentric tech genius (and Mars's hero) Oliver Pruitt, whose popular podcast now seems to be commenting on their quest.
Selection for January 19
The power of Adrienne Rich by Hilary Holladay
The first comprehensive biography of Adrienne Rich, feminist and queer icon and internationally revered National Book Award-winning poet.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
A Surprised Queenhood in the New Black Sun
by Angela Jackson
A look back at the cultural and political force of Pulitzer Prize–winning poet Gwendolyn Brooks, in celebration of her 100th birthday.
Red Comet: the short life and blazing art of Sylvia Plath
by Heather Clark
Focuses on Sylvia Plath's remarkable literary and intellectual achievements, while restoring the woman behind the long-held myths about her life and art.
Toni Morrison: The Pieces I Am
An artful and intimate meditation on the life and works of the acclaimed novelist.
(DVD)
Memorial Drive
by Natasha Trethewey
Trethewey's narration makes the audiobook version exceptionally powerful. With penetrating insight and a searing voice, the author explores the tragic course of her mother's life and the way her own life has been shaped by a legacy of fierce love and resilience.
These Fevered Days: Ten Pivotal Moments in the Making of Emily Dickinson
by Martha Ackmann
Ackmann posits that decisive episodes in Dickinson's life contributed to her evolution as a strikingly singular voice in American poetry.
With a Star in My Hand: Ruben Dario, Poetry Hero
by Margarita Engle
A novel in verse about the life and work of Rubén Darío, a Nicaraguan poet who started life as an abandoned child and grew to become the father of a new literary movement.
A Poet's Revolution: The Life of Denise Levertov
by Donna Hollenberg
Asserting that the most important “facts” about a poet are her major poems, Hollenberg skillfully interweaves details concerning Levertov's life and works.
Exquisite: The Poetry and Life of Gwendolyn Brooks
by Suzanne Slade, illustrated by Cozbi A. Cabrera
Gwendolyn Brooks (1917-2000) is known for her poems about “real life.” She wrote about love, loneliness, family, and poverty – showing readers how just about anything could become a beautiful poem. This picture book biography explores the intersections of race, gender, and the ubiquitous poverty of the Great Depression.
Imagina
por Juan Felipe Herrera
Cuando Juan Felipe Herrera era niño, recogió flores, ayudó a su mamá a alimentar a los pollitos, durmió bajo el cielo centelleante y aprendió a decirles adiós a sus amiguitos cada vez que su familia seguía el camino campesino. Al crecer, Juan Felipe Herrera se convirtió en poeta. Su hermoso poema, "Imagina" y las sugerentes ilustraciones de Lauren Castillo le hablarán a cada lector y soñador que está buscando su lugar en la vida. ¿Quién podrías llegar a ser? Imagina...
Selection for January 12
A Walk in the Woods by Bill Bryson
A laugh-out-loud account of an outrageously rugged hike.
(Print book, large type book, eBook, eAudiobook, book on CD)
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
Dogtripping
by David Rosenfelt
A hilarious chronicle of moving 25 rescue dogs across the country in an RV and then starting a dog rescue foundation.
Horizon
by Barry Lopez
Distinguished natural history writer and explorer Lopez builds a winning memoir around books, voyages, and biological and anthropological observations.
Wild
by Cheryl Strayed
Hiking the Pacific Crest Trail after her mother's death and her own subsequent divorce, the author takes readers with her on the trail, and the transformation she experiences on its course is significant.
(Print book, DVD, Spanish book, book on CD, eBook, eAudiobook)
Forest Bathing: How Trees Can Help You Find Health and Happiness
by Qing Li
The world's foremost expert in forest medicine shows how forest bathing can reduce your stress levels, strengthen your immune system, boost your mood, and even help you lose weight and live longer.
La Cocina del Bosque
por Erin Gleeson
Gleeson, desde su casa en Sebastopol, produce el blog "The Forest Feast" donde comparte recetas, fotos y más de su vida en una cabaña en el bosque. Sumérgete en el bosque con este libro delicioso.
The Secrets we Bury
by Stacie Ramey
Rather than be placed in a special school for psychologically-challenged students, Dylan, six months from turning 18, sets out on the Appalachian Trail, where he makes surprising connections with other hikers.
Prodigal Summer
by Barbara Kingsolver
Looking for fiction about the Appalachian Trail? Enjoy this vividly detailed Appalachian setting, in which wildlife biologist Deanna is caught off guard by an intrusive young hunter, while bookish city wife Lusa finds herself facing a difficult identity choice, and elderly neighbors find attraction at the height of a long-standing feud.
The Hike
by Drew Magary
Try this if you like Bryson's hilarious and engaging writing about nature, and also enjoy science fiction.
The Trail
by Meika Hashimoto
Toby and his friend Lucas made a list of things to do the summer before they entered middle school, but now Lucas is gone, and Toby sets out to fulfill the promise he made to his friend, to finish the list by hiking the Appalachian Trail from Velvet Rocks to Mt. Katahdin.
Selection for January 5
American Catch by Paul Greenberg
Paul Greenberg takes the same skills that won him acclaim in Four Fish to uncover the tragic unraveling of the nation's seafood supply, telling the surprising story of why.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
The Book of Eels: Our Enduring Fascination with the Most Mysterious Creature in the Natural World
by Patrik Svensson
Svensson, a Swedish journalist, melds the personal and scientific in this captivating look at the European eel. His book is a highly readable place to begin learning.
The Marauders
by Tom Cooper
After the BP oil spill devastates the Gulf Coast, the oddballs and lowlifes who live in the sleepy, working-class bayou town of Jeannette will do anything to reverse their fortunes.
Filmmaker and novice farmer John Chester chronicles the eight-year quest he and Molly Chester went on when they traded city living for 200 acres of barren farmland in the foothills of Ventura County and a dream to harvest in harmony with nature.
(DVD)
The Third Plate: Field Notes on the Future of Food
by Dan Barber
Moving beyond the organic farming and farm-to-table movements, Barber argues for the importance of the whole farm; an integrated, biodynamic system that sustains the richness and diversity of land and sea.
Goodnight, Texas
by William J. Cobb
In Goodnight, Texas, people struggle to survive job loss, severe over-fishing, and a looming hurricane. A lyrical, romantic, comic, and redemptive story.
Tales from the Inner City
by Shaun Tan
A collection of illustrated short stories, each one about the relationship of humans and the animals, both wild and domestic, that share the urban environment of the inner city.
The Great Shark Rescue: Saving the Whale Sharks
by Sandra Markle
Presents the story of whale sharks, the largest fish on the planet. Can volunteers and scientists help save the world's biggest fish before it's too late?