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Exit West

9780735212176
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Several books use the concept of a magical door to provide characters entry into other worlds, or to better places in this one. Exit West, a timely novel about refugees by Man Booker Prize winner Mohsin Hamid, employs this device—but because of the power of his plotting and beauty of his prose, it's highly believable.

The novel begins when a young man, Saeed, meets Nadia in an adult evening class in an unnamed country at some point in the near future. Civil war wracks the country; terrorists and militants roam the streets. Read more about Exit West

Posted by Dory L. on June 14, 2017
Exit West: A Novel
Fiction
Diversity
Reviews
Think Library
  • Dory L.'s blog

Hillbilly Elegy

9780062300546
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Many in the media and politics keep trying to figure out why our new President attracts so many Rust Belt and Appalachian voters. This memoir of a young man’s coming of age in both regions may offer some insight.

At only thirty-one, J.D. Vance admits he's way too young to have penned a memoir. He hasn’t done anything extraordinary (though he did graduate from Yale Law School, a major accomplishment for a kid from a single-parent home in a working-class town in Ohio, where many did not finish high school).

Vance writes most vividly of Jackson, his dirt-poor but beautiful ancestral home in the mountains of eastern Kentucky. He also describes his people: a great-grandmother who once killed someone, and his own Mamaw who often threatens to do the same to her husband when he comes home drunk. In fact, J.D. relates, one night he saves his Pawpaw after Mamaw poured gasoline over him and lights a match. Read more about Hillbilly Elegy

Posted by Dory L. on May 23, 2017
Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis
Biography & Memoir
Nonfiction
Reviews
Think Library
  • Dory L.'s blog

Strong Female Protagonist by Brennan Lee Mulligan

9780692246184
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Mega Girl was the best superhero around—until she gave up her lifestyle of punching bad guys and saving the world. Now, ex-Mega Girl Alison Green is trying to live a normal life, go to college, and figure everything out. As she works to save the world without a mask, finish her homework, and attempt to cope with the past, Alison learns that heroism can take many forms. Read more about Strong Female Protagonist by Brennan Lee Mulligan

Posted by Sam O. on May 18, 2017
Strong Female Protagonist. Book 1
Adventure
Graphic Novels & Manga
Think Library
Teens
Reviews
  • Sam O.'s blog

Rumble, Vol. 1: What Color of Darkness by John Arcudi

9781632153838
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An ancient god of war out for vengeance, a lonely bartender, and an angry fire demon all walk into a bar. Sounds like the start of a joke, right? Well, that's almost correct.

What Color of Darkness imagines a world where ancient gods and monsters feud over thousands of years to decide the fate of humanity. Humans have a mighty champion in the war god Rathraq, who fights to make sure humankind can flourish in safety—but he's betrayed and imprisoned for thousands of years. Now Rathraq's soul has been released and forced to inhabit a scarecrow, but this won't stop his quest for revenge. Aided by the bartender Bobby, who's just trying to get by in life, Rathraq hunts for the monster queen who stole his body, clashes with an outsized fire demon, and confronts a world starkly different than the one he remembers. Read more about Rumble, Vol. 1: What Color of Darkness by John Arcudi

Posted by Sam O. on May 18, 2017
Color of Darkness
Adventure
Graphic Novels & Manga
Fantasy
Think Library
Teens
Reviews
  • Sam O.'s blog

Winner of the 2017 Rosie Award: All the Bright Places by Jennifer Niven

9780385755887
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The Eliot Rosewater Indiana High School Book Award winner for 2017 is All the Bright Places by Jennifer Niven. Winners are decided by Indiana high school students who choose from twenty-five nominated titles [PDF]. This year's honor titles are Cory Doctorow's In Real Life and Through the Woods by Emily Carroll. 

Trust us: you'll love All the Bright Places! Its publisher describes it this way:

Read more about Winner of the 2017 Rosie Award: All the Bright Places by Jennifer Niven
Posted by Becky F. on May 18, 2017
All the Bright Places
Award Winner
Local Interest
Think Library
Teens
Reviews
  • Becky F.'s blog

May 17th is World Baking Day!

9781607742739
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Celebrate World Baking Day by exploring one of humanity’s oldest sources of nutrition—bread! Although modern grocery store bread has little in common ancient Egypt’s first flatbreads, this dietary staple has remained popular through millennia and across the world.

Read more about May 17th is World Baking Day!
Posted by Lizzie F. on May 17, 2017
The New Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day: The Discovery that Revolutionizes Home Baking
My Bread: The Revolutionary No-Work, No-Knead Method
The Hot Bread Kitchen Cookbook: Artisanal Baking from Around the World
Flour Water Salt Yeast : The Fundamentals of Artisan Bread and Pizza
Tartine Bread
Tartine Book No. 3: Modern, Ancient, Classic, Whole
Bread Revolution: World-Class Baking with Sprouted & Whole Grains, Heirloom Flours & Fresh Techniques
125 Best Gluten-Free Bread Machine Recipes
Gluten-free bread
Gluten-Free Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day
Cookbooks
Reviews
  • Lizzie F.'s blog

Homegoing

9781101947135
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A Ghana proverb says, “By going and coming, a bird weaves its nest.” The title of this novel tells the story of many people from Ghana who were forcibly removed from their African home, yet centuries later, two descendants return to find their family.

If you liked Colson Whitehead’s The Underground Railroad, Yaa Gyasi’s novel will make the perfect follow-up.  Hard to believe that she started writing this in her early twenties and finished it by age twenty-six. It covers much more ground than Whitehead’s historical novel: Africa and the U.S., and much more time, from the mid-seventeen hundreds to now.  

At one point in the novel, a black history teacher describes history as storytelling. Gyasi presents many eloquent and heart-rending stories here. What ties them together is that all the characters belong to one extended family, who were once royalty in Ghana. They became both slave-sellers and slaves. Many came to America.

Gyasi follows two tracks of this family: one remained in Ghana, the other was forced into slavery in the U.S.  It follows their descendants after the Civil War, Reconstruction, and the great migration north.

Gyasi visited Africa as a student to do research on a book about mothers and daughters. But when she toured Ghana’s Cape Coast Castle, something in the rooms, the cellar where slaves were chained and abused in dungeons called out to her. She immediately decided to focus on the African slave trade and its diaspora later in the U.S. Read more about Homegoing

Posted by Dory L. on April 25, 2017
Homegoing
African American
Fiction
Diversity
Reviews
Think Library
  • Dory L.'s blog

Wires and Nerve Vol. 1 by Marissa Meyer

9781250078261
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Wires and Nerve picks up after the events of Winter (and Cinder, Scarlett, and Cress) so STOP RIGHT NOW if you haven't read those books. Actually, what's wrong with you? Go read those! They're so good! Start with Cinder, you're welcome.

Iko, the android who loves pretty clothes and shoes is also a butt kicking secret agent. She's been sent to Earth to round up the remaining rogue mutant soldiers from Luna and send them home to face justice, but every once in awhile one of them will slip away from her. Cinder tells her not to worry, but Iko can't help but feel like she's failing by not getting every single soldier safely away from Earth. Now it seems like she might be right, these soldiers are coming together in a way that threatens everyone Iko loves. Read more about Wires and Nerve Vol. 1 by Marissa Meyer

Posted by Becky F. on April 18, 2017
Wires and Nerve. Volume 1
Graphic Novels & Manga
Sci-Fi
Think Library
Teens
Reviews
  • Becky F.'s blog

The Vegetarian

9780553448184
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For me, books are a form of traveling to distant places, places I will probably never see. Because of this, I decided to check out this Man Booker Prize winner about South Korea.

My experience with books set in Korea has centered on North Korea—mostly nonfiction, except for Adam Johnson’s stellar novel The Orphan Master’s Son that won the Pulitzer in 2012.

The Vegetarian begins with the speaker, Cheong, saying, “Before my wife turned vegetarian, I’d always thought of her as unremarkable in every way.” Cheong, an ambitious businessman, then states that he deliberately chose his wife because she was so bland.

But late one night, Yeong-hye wakes from a dream. Cheong finds her in the kitchen in the dark; she does not respond to his words or even his touch. The next day, Yeong-hye, almost in a trancelike state, throws away all the meat and fish from their refrigerator and freezer. She never willingly eats flesh again. Read more about The Vegetarian

Posted by Dory L. on March 16, 2017
The Vegetarian
Family
Reviews
Think Library
  • Dory L.'s blog

Lillian Boxfish Takes a Walk

9781250113320
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Solvitur Ambulande, solved by walking, could be the motto of this novel. And if you, like me, process the world while strolling through town or the woods, you’ll love this book.

Two alternating stories thread through it. In one, it’s the 1980s, and New York City still has a crime problem, so people fear walking at night.  Most, that is, except for Lillian Boxfish, an octogenarian advertising maven (retired) and a poet. It’s New Year’s 1985, and a ten-mile, round trip walk from upper Manhattan to the Bowery and the Village is no big deal for her.

The second story first-time novelist Kathleen Rooney weaves tells Lillian’s history in the Big Apple. After moving to New York from D.C. in the roaring twenties, Lillian immediately felt at home. She began living in Manhattan in a sheltered rooming house with strict curfews and rules against male visitors.  Lillian and her childhood girlfriend got around these rules by organizing Shakespearean theater pieces to which they invited eligible bachelors.  Later, they’d head out on the town with them, and coming back hours after curvew, they’d tip the front desk person, and steal back to their rooms. Read more about Lillian Boxfish Takes a Walk

Posted by Dory L. on March 1, 2017
Lillian Boxfish Takes a Walk: A Novel
Fiction
Reviews
Think Library
  • Dory L.'s blog

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Monroe County Public Library |  812-349-3050
303 E. Kirkwood Avenue, Bloomington, IN 47408

Ellettsville Branch |  812-876-1272
600 West Temperance Street, Ellettsville, IN 47429

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