October Staff Recommendations

A Reason to See You Again by Jami Attenberg

Jami Attenberg writes family dramas like no other. Who else can cover such complicated relationships spanning forty years in less than 250 pages? She's a marvel. This one follows the volatile relationships between mother Frieda, her daughters Nancy & Shelly, and Nancy's daughter Jess from the 1970s to the early 2000s. Full of nostalgia, it's a walk through an ever-changing American landscape and culture. This new release is available at the library. ~ Leslie M.

The Girls Who Disappeared by Claire Douglas

The Devil's Corridor- a haunted road in a rural Wiltshire town has witnessed eerie happenings. Four girls were driving home. After their car crashed only one- Olivia was found. After twenty years a journalist arrives to do a podcast about the case. No one is happy. Is there another mystery? This book is available at the library. ~ Bonnie

Triangle by Danielle Steel

A Paris gallery owner is happy with her single life as she turns forty. Despite being fine with being alone, she isn't opposed to finding someone to share her life with. She reconnects with a former college boyfriend who has come to Paris to write a novel and meets a handsome publisher at a client's party.

As she gets reacquainted with her former boyfriend and begins spending time with her caring new friend, she begins to receive threatening phone calls at night. She turns to her friend and co-owner of the art gallery to help her figure out who is terrorizing her because she's uncertain if it's one of the two men she recently began seeing or someone else. This new release is available at the library. ~ Erin

The Rule of Three by Sam Ripley

Don't forget the rule of three. It's coming for you like it came for me. Is there really a curse of three, or is there more at play here? Definitely worth the read. This book is available at the library. ~ Leslie W.

 

Posted on in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.

  • Other Posts

    • January Staff Recommendations
      The Little Bookshop on the Seine by Rebecca Raisin I really enjoyed this book because I felt like I could relate with the main character. Sarah Smith, an ...
    • New Book Club for Adults Starting in February
      Join fellow foodies and book lovers for a quarterly discussion of cookbooks, food-related memoirs and tasty fiction reads. Each quarter members will read ...
    • December Staff Recommendations
      Now or Never by Janet Evanovich Well, Stephanie Plum does makeup her mind…on the very last page. After spending the entire book being engaged to ...
Forsyth Township Public Library