City of the Lost by Kelly Armstrong
Casey Duncan is a homicide detective with a secret: when she
was in college, she killed a man. She was never caught, but he was the grandson
of a mobster and she knows that someday this crime will catch up to her.
Casey's best friend, Diana, is on the run from a violent, abusive ex-husband.
When Diana's husband finds her, and Casey herself is attacked shortly after,
Casey knows it's time for the two of them to disappear again.
Diana has heard of a town made for people like her, a town
that takes in people on the run who want to shed their old lives. You must
apply to live in Rockton and if you're accepted, it means walking away entirely
from your old life, and living off the grid in the wilds of Canada: no cell
phones, no Internet, no mail, no computers, very little electricity, and no way
of getting in or out without the town council's approval. As a murderer, Casey
isn't a good candidate, but she has something they want: She's a homicide detective,
and Rockton has just had its first real murder. She and Diana are in. However,
soon after arriving, Casey realizes that the identity of a murderer isn't the
only secret Rockton is hiding―in fact, she starts to wonder if she and Diana
might be in even more danger in Rockton than they were in their old lives.
An edgy, gripping crime novel from bestselling urban fantasy
writer Kelley Armstrong, City of the Lost boldly announces a major new player
in the crime fiction world. – Amazon Description
The Bookseller by Cynthia Swanson
A provocative and hauntingly powerful debut novel
reminiscent of Sliding Doors, The Bookseller follows a woman in the 1960s who
must reconcile her reality with the tantalizing alternate world of her dreams.
Nothing is as permanent as it appears . . .
Denver, 1962: Kitty Miller has come to terms with her
unconventional single life. She loves the bookshop she runs with her best
friend, Frieda, and enjoys complete control over her day-to-day existence. She
can come and go as she pleases, answering to no one. There was a man once, a doctor
named Kevin, but it didn’t quite work out the way Kitty had hoped.
Then the dreams begin.
Denver, 1963: Katharyn Andersson is married to Lars, the
love of her life. They have beautiful children, an elegant home, and good
friends. It’s everything Kitty Miller once believed she wanted—but it only
exists when she sleeps.
Convinced that these dreams are simply due to her overactive
imagination, Kitty enjoys her nighttime forays into this alternate world. But
with each visit, the more irresistibly real Katharyn’s life becomes. Can she
choose which life she wants? If so, what is the cost of staying Kitty, or
becoming Katharyn?
As the lines between her worlds begin to blur, Kitty must
figure out what is real and what is imagined. And how do we know where that
boundary lies in our own lives? – Amazon Description
The Fireman by Joe Hill
From the award-winning, New York Times bestselling author of
NOS4A2 and Heart-Shaped Box comes a chilling novel about a worldwide pandemic
of spontaneous combustion that threatens to reduce civilization to ashes and a
band of improbable heroes who battle to save it, led by one powerful and
enigmatic man known as the Fireman.
The fireman is coming. Stay cool.
No one knows exactly when it began or where it originated. A
terrifying new plague is spreading like wildfire across the country, striking
cities one by one: Boston, Detroit, Seattle. The doctors call it Draco Incendia
Trychophyton. To everyone else it’s Dragonscale, a highly contagious, deadly
spore that marks its hosts with beautiful black and gold marks across their
bodies—before causing them to burst into flames. Millions are infected; blazes
erupt everywhere. There is no antidote. No one is safe.
Harper Grayson, a compassionate, dedicated nurse as
pragmatic as Mary Poppins, treated hundreds of infected patients before her
hospital burned to the ground. Now she’s discovered the telltale gold-flecked
marks on her skin. When the outbreak first began, she and her husband, Jakob,
had made a pact: they would take matters into their own hands if they became
infected. To Jakob’s dismay, Harper wants to live—at least until the fetus she
is carrying comes to term. At the hospital, she witnessed infected mothers give
birth to healthy babies and believes hers will be fine too. . . if she can live
long enough to deliver the child.
Convinced that his do-gooding wife has made him sick, Jakob
becomes unhinged, and eventually abandons her as their placid New England community
collapses in terror. The chaos gives rise to ruthless Cremation Squads—armed,
self-appointed posses roaming the streets and woods to exterminate those who
they believe carry the spore. But Harper isn’t as alone as she fears: a
mysterious and compelling stranger she briefly met at the hospital, a man in a
dirty yellow fire fighter’s jacket, carrying a hooked iron bar, straddles the
abyss between insanity and death. Known as The Fireman, he strolls the ruins of
New Hampshire, a madman afflicted with Dragonscale who has learned to control
the fire within himself, using it as a shield to protect the hunted . . . and
as a weapon to avenge the wronged.
In the desperate season to come, as the world burns out of
control, Harper must learn the Fireman’s secrets before her life—and that of
her unborn child—goes up in smoke. – Amazon Description
Pit Bull: The Battle over an American Icon by Bronwen Dickey
The hugely illuminating story of how a popular breed of dog
became the most demonized and supposedly the most dangerous of dogs—and what
role humans have played in the transformation.
When Bronwen Dickey brought her new dog home, she saw no
traces of the infamous viciousness in her affectionate, timid pit bull. Which
made her wonder: How had the breed—beloved by Teddy Roosevelt, Helen Keller,
and Hollywood’s “Little Rascals”—come to be known as a brutal fighter?
Her search for answers takes her from nineteenth-century New
York City dogfighting pits—the cruelty of which drew the attention of the
recently formed ASPCA—to early twentieth‑century movie sets, where pit bulls cavorted with Fatty
Arbuckle and Buster Keaton; from the battlefields of Gettysburg and the Marne,
where pit bulls earned presidential recognition, to desolate urban
neighborhoods where the dogs were loved, prized—and sometimes brutalized.
Whether through love or fear, hatred or devotion, humans are
bound to the history of the pit bull. With unfailing thoughtfulness,
compassion, and a firm grasp of scientific fact, Dickey offers us a clear-eyed
portrait of this extraordinary breed, and an insightful view of Americans’
relationship with their dogs. – Amazon Description
The above books are available for checkout through the Lake County Library System.
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