Books – Detail

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1014: Brian Boru & the Battle for Ireland
Morgan Llywelyn

A page-turning exploration of a warrior king's life, loves, and battles, bringing the facts to life with a novelist's eye for detail and drama.

256 pp. - History

52 Ways to Reconcile: How to Walk with Indigenous Peoples on the Path to Healing
David A. Robertson

From bestselling author of the Misewa Saga series David A. Robertson, this is the essential guide for all Canadians to understand how small and attainable acts towards reconciliation can make an enormous difference in our collective efforts to build a reconciled country.

227 pp. - Nonfiction

Abandoned and Forgotten Cemeteries of Philadelphia and its Environs
Ed Snyder

This book explores Philadelphia’s lost and neglected cemeteries, revealing a hidden history of change, decay, and restoration.

96 pp. - Nonfiction

All the Men I've Loved Again
Christine Pride

From Christine Pride, the beloved coauthor of the Good Morning America Book Club Pick We Are Not Like Them, comes a dazzling solo debut novel about a woman who finds herself in the impossible situation of being in love with the same two men who won her heart in her early twenties again as she nears forty.

303 pp. - Fiction

The Allure of Elsewhere: A Memoir of Going Solo
Karen Babine

One woman’s cross-country journey to explore the hold family history has on our lives, and the power of new stories to shape what lies ahead.

257 pp. - Biography

Among Friends
Hal Ebbott

Written with hypnotic elegance and molten precision, and announcing the arrival of a major literary talent, Hal Ebbott’s Among Friends examines betrayal within the sanctuary of a defining relationship, as well as themes of class, marriage, friendship, power, and the things we tell ourselves to preserve our finely made worlds.

309 pp. - Fiction

Angelica: For Love and Country in a Time of Revolution
Molly Beer

A women-centric view of revolution through the life of Angelica Schuyler Church, Alexander Hamilton’s influential sister-in-law.

320 pp. - Biography

Architecture For Cars: How cars shaped modern architecture
Christopher Beanland

A smooth ride through the golden age of car travel, looking at both its cultural and architectural impact on the world.

256 pp. - Art, Architecture & Design

Architectures of Slavery: Ruins and Reconstructions
Nathaniel Robert Walker, Rachel Ama Asaa Engmann (Editors)

The material legacies of slavery across the Atlantic world.

355 pp. - History

The Art of Vanishing
Morgan Pager

A stunningly original love story between a museum employee and the man in a masterpiece hanging on the walls—a breathtaking debut about time, art, and the enduring power of love.

292 pp. - Fiction

The Art Spy: The Extraordinary Untold Tale of WWII Resistance Hero Rose Valland
Michelle Young

A riveting and stylish saga set in Paris during World War II, The Art Spy uncovers how an unlikely heroine infiltrated the Nazi leadership to save the world's most treasured masterpieces.

390 pp. - Biography

The Ascent
Ronald Malfi

An "adventure story of man against the elements with man being the most dangerous element of all" by the award-winning author of Bone White (Publishers Weekly).

338 pp. - Fiction

Atmosphere: A Love Story
Taylor Jenkins Reid

From the author of The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo and Daisy Jones & The Six comes an epic new novel set against the backdrop of the 1980s space shuttle program about the extraordinary lengths we go to live and love beyond our limits.

#1 New York Times Bestseller; Good Morning America Book Club Pick

337 pp. - Fiction

Backroom Deals in Our Backyards: How Government Secrecy Harms Our Communities and the Local Heroes Fighting Back
Miranda S. Spivack

A groundbreaking look at how ordinary people are fighting back against their local and state governments to keep their communities safe, by an award-winning journalist.

Winner of the Studs and Ida Terkel Prize

221 pp. - Nonfiction

Beautiful Nights
Nina George

A respected professor begins a secret affair with her son’s girlfriend one summer on the Brittany coast in this intense, poetic novel from the New York Times bestselling author of The Little Paris Bookshop.

276 pp. - Fiction

Before Gender: Lost Stories from Trans History, 1850-1950
Eli Erlick

Explore the trailblazing lives of 30 trans people who radically change everything you’ve been told about transgender history.

268 pp. - History

A Beginner's Guide to Dying
Simon Boas

Lessons for all of us in how to approach life—from someone in the process of dying.

141 pp. - Biography

Being Various: New Irish Short Stories
Various

Featuring brand new short stories from Kevin Barry, Eimear McBride, Belinda McKeon, Lisa McInerney, Danielle McLaughlin, Stuart Neville, Sally Rooney, Kit de Waal and many more.

354 pp. - Fiction

Beneath Our Feet: Everyday Discoveries Reshaping History
Michael Lewis & Ian Richardson

Recounts the incredible stories of more than fifty archaeological treasures recently found by ordinary people, and which are reshaping our understanding of British history.

271 pp. - Nonfiction

Beneath the Buried Sea
Victoria Mier

Journalist Raegan Overhill’s investigation into her father’s disappearance has taken her deep into strange, glittering worlds—and hopelessly entangled her with the dangerous, alluring Unseelie king. But the truths she’s fought so hard for offer no comfort, and certainly no closure. With the Unseelie Fae King at her side, Raegan’s only choice is to forge ahead—right into a looming war against a powerful god, which just might destroy everything she holds dear.

531 pp. - Fiction

Between Two Hells: The Irish Civil War
Diarmaid Ferriter

Drawing on completely new sources, Ireland's most brilliant historian shows how important the Irish War of Independence was for understanding Ireland now.

328 pp. - History

Between Two Rivers: Ancient Mesopotamia and the Birth of History
Moudhy Al-Rashid

Humanity’s earliest efforts at recording and drawing meaning from history reveal how lives millennia ago were not so different from our own.

 

327 pp. - History

Beyond the Aching Door
Victoria Mier

A mortal journalist. A mysterious series of drownings. An exiled Fey king. A forgotten Fatesong. A single, desperate chance to save magic from extinction.

480 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

Birnbaum's 2025 Walt Disney World: The Official Vacation Guide
Birnbaum Guides

Presents a guide to the different sections of Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida, including the Magic Kingdom, EPCOT, Hollywood Studios, Animal Kingdom, and the Walt Disney World resorts.

364 pp. - Miscellaneous

Black Citymakers: How the Philadelphia Negro Changed Urban America
Marcus Anthony Hunter

Black Citymakers explores a century of socioeconomic, cultural, and political history in the Black Seventh Ward, creating a new understanding of the political agency of black residents, leaders and activists in twentieth century urban change.

286 pp. - History

The Black Family Who Built America: The McKissacks, Two Centuries of Daring Pioneers
Cheryl McKissack Daniel

The riveting story of the McKissack family—the founders of the leading Black design and construction firm in the United States, from its beginnings in the mid-1800s to its thriving status today—in a moving celebration of resilience and innovation.

263 pp. - Biography

Black Genius: Essays on an American Legacy
Tre Johnson

A powerful read examining the lack of opportunity given to Black Americans due to structural racism, and how forgotten historical figures and the author's own family found a way to succeed despite the obstacles.

289 pp. - Nonfiction

The Bombshell
Darrow Farr

An electric novel by an extraordinary new talent, The Bombshell is filled with seduction and fervor, and explores the wonders and perils of youthful idealism, the combustibility of celebrity, and the sublime force of young love.

408 pp. - Fiction

The Book of Alchemy: A Creative Practice for an Inspired Life
Suleika Jaouad

A guide to the art of journaling—and a meditation on the central questions of life—by the bestselling author of Between Two Kingdoms, with contributions from Hanif Abdurraqib, Jon Batiste, Salman Rushdie, Gloria Steinem, George Saunders, and many more.

305 pp. - Miscellaneous

The Book of Records
Madeleine Thien

A novel that leaps across centuries past and future, as if different eras were separated by only a door.

357 pp. - Fiction

A Bookseller in Madrid
Mario Escobar

An exciting and rigorously documented novel by one of the most translated and read Spanish authors in the world. This hopeful and inspiring story in the face of the horror of intolerance is, above all, an indisputable tribute to literature.

284 pp. - Fiction

The Boy from the Sea
Garrett Carr

Set on Ireland’s west coast in the 1970s and 80s, a captivating debut novel about a baby boy who is discovered on the beach beside a small fishing town, as told by the locals who fall under the boy’s transfixing spell.

326 pp. - Fiction

Bring the House Down
Charlotte Runcie

A theater critic at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe writes a vicious one-star review of a struggling actress he has a one-night stand with in this sharply funny, feminist tinderbox.

297 pp. - Fiction

Broken Country
Clare Leslie Hall

A love triangle unearths dangerous, deadly secrets from the past in this thrilling tale perfect for fans of The Paper Palace and Where the Crawdads Sing.

New York Times Bestseller; A Reese's Book Club Pick

307 pp. - Fiction

Calypso in London
Sam Selvon

Describing life in the Caribbean and day-to-day adventures in London, this collection features many of Sam Selvon's most acclaimed stories, including 'The Village Washer', 'A Drink of Water' and 'The Cricket Match'.

160 pp. - Fiction

Camino Winds
John Grisham

Welcome back to Camino Island, where anything can happen-even a murder in the midst of a hurricane, which might prove to be the perfect crime . . . Just as Bruce Cable's Bay Books is preparing for the return of bestselling author Mercer Mann, Hurricane Leo veers from its predicted course and heads straight for the island. Florida's governor orders a mandatory evacuation, and most residents board up their houses and flee to the mainland, but Bruce decides to stay and ride out the storm. The hurricane is devastating: homes and condos are leveled, hotels and storefronts ruined, streets flooded, and a dozen people lose their lives. One of the apparent victims is Nelson Kerr, a friend of Bruce's and an author of thrillers. But the nature of Nelson's injuries suggests that the storm wasn't the cause of his death: He has suffered several suspicious blows to the head. Who would want Nelson dead? The local police are overwhelmed in the aftermath of the storm and ill equipped to handle the case. Bruce begins to wonder if the shady characters in Nelson's novels might be more real than fictional. And somewhere on Nelson's computer is the manuscript of his new novel. Could the key to the case be right there-in black and white? As Bruce starts to investigate, what he discovers between the lines is more shocking than any of Nelson's plot twists-and far more dangerous.

292 pp. - Fiction

The Catch
Yrsa Daley-Ward

The inaugural novel in the Well-Read Black Girl Books series, The Catch is a darkly whimsical tale of women daring to live and create with impunity.

336 pp. - Fiction

The Cemetery Traveler
Ed Snyder

Taking "dark tourism" to new heights, author/blogger/photographer Ed Snyder not only feeds your curiosity be taking you into hundreds of cemeteries across America, but he takes you into his private world of cemetery travel. Morbid curiosity leads to all-consuming passion for dead things.

128 pp. - Miscellaneous

Changing My Mind
Julian Barnes

Bestselling author Julian Barnes illuminates the process of how minds are changed—about politics, books, words, memories, and more—in this wise and fascinating new book.

57 pp. - Nonfiction

The CIA Book Club: The Secret Mission to Win the Cold War with Forbidden Literature
Charlie English

Recounts a covert Cold War operation led by George Minden to smuggle banned literature into Eastern Europe, focusing on the cultural and psychological battle against Soviet censorship and the role underground reading networks played in weakening totalitarian control, especially in Poland.

341 pp. - History

City of Bohane
Kevin Barry

Set 40 years in the future, the once great city of Bohane on the west coast of Ireland is in terminal decline, with vice and tribal splits rife. Logan Hartnett, godfather of the Hartnett Fancy gang has been in charge but his nemesis has arrived back in town, his henchmen are becoming ambitious, his wife wants him to give it all up and go straight and, he has his mother to contend with.

Shortlisted for the 2011 Costa Book Award in the First Novel category

277 pp. - Fiction

The Clues in the Fjord
Satu Rämö

Hildur Runarsdottir is the only police detective in the isolated Westfjords of Iceland, desperately trying to forget her traumatic past by burying herself in her cases. Once Jakob Johanson, a Finnish police trainee with a knitting hobby, begins to work alongside Hildur to escape his own complicated life, it becomes clear that neither can keep their pasts away for long. But when a local man is found with his throat slit, underneath an avalanche that has buried much of the evidence, Hildur and Jakob must set their own problems aside and unravel the dark secrets and a killer that the picturesque fjords hide...

334 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

Coffee Nation: How One Commodity Transformed the Early United States
Michelle Craig McDonald

Illuminates how coffee tied the economic future of the early United States to the wider Atlantic world.

271 pp. - Nonfiction

Confessions
Kanae Minato

In this international bestselling thriller, a former teacher delivers her final lesson to her students—including the two children that murdered her daughter.

324 pp. - Fiction

The Convenience Store by the Sea
Sonoko Machida

An international bestseller with over half a million copies sold between Japan and South Korea, The Convenience Store by The Sea tells the delightfully quirky and heartfelt stories of the store's customers and employees, offering us all a unique recipe for a good, fulfilling life.

297 pp. - Fiction

The Dark Hours
Amy Jordan

"This suspenseful story will appeal to readers of contemporary police procedurals like Tana French’s Dublin Murder series and Jane Harper’s Aaron Falk series." —Jane Harper, Booklist

314 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

The Dark Maestro
Brendan Slocumb

A propulsive and moving story about sacrifice, loyalty, and the indomitable human spirit, The Dark Maestro is Brendan Slocumb at the height of his powers.

403 pp. - Fiction

A Dark, A Light, A Bright: The Designs of Dorothy Liebes
Susan Brown & Alexa Griffith Winton (Editors)

The first major publication devoted to weaver and designer Dorothy Liebes, reinstating her as one of the most influential American designers of the twentieth century

253 pp. - Art, Architecture & Design

Dead-End Memories
Banana Yoshimoto

Japan's internationally celebrated master storyteller returns with five stories of women on their way to healing that vividly portrays the blissful moments and everyday sorrows that surround us in everyday life.

221 pp. - Fiction

Dear Writer: Pep Talks & Practical Advice for the Creative Life
Maggie Smith

Drawing from her twenty years of teaching experience and her bestselling Substack newsletter, For Dear Life, Maggie Smith breaks down creativity into ten essential elements: attention, wonder, vision, play, surprise, vulnerability, restlessness, tenacity, connection, and hope. Each element is explored through short, inspiring, and craft-focused essays, followed by generative writing prompts.

253 pp. - Nonfiction

Death at the White Hart
Chris Chibnall

From the internationally award-winning creator of Broadchurch comes a brilliant new detective story following one man’s death and the secrets that unravel in a coastal English village

340 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

The Death of Us
Lori Rader-Day

From the award-winning author of Death at Greenway and The Lucky One comes a chilling suspense novel in which the discovery of a submerged car in a murky pond reveals betrayals and family secrets that will tear a small town apart.

370 pp. - Fiction

Death Takes Me
Cristina Rivera Garza

From the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Liliana's Invincible Summera dreamlike, genre-defying novel about a professor and detective seeking justice in a world suffused with gendered violence.

290 pp. - Fiction

The Decorated Tenement: How Immigrant Builders and Architects Transformed the Slum in the Gilded Age
Zachary J. Violette

A reexamination of working-class architecture in late nineteenth-century urban America

Winner of the International Society of Place, Landscape, and Culture Fred B. Kniffen Award

279 pp. - History

Deep Cuts
Holly Brickley

Moving from Brooklyn bars to San Francisco dance floors, Deep Cuts examines the nature of talent, obsession, belonging, and above all, our need to be heard.

275 pp. - Fiction

Desi Arnaz: The Man Who Invented Television
Todd S Purdum

An illuminating biography of Desi Arnaz, the visionary, trailblazing Cuban American who revolutionized television and brought laughter to millions as Lucille Ball’s beloved husband on I Love Lucy, leaving a remarkable legacy that continues to influence American culture today.

355 pp. - Biography

The Devil Wears Rothko
Barry Avrich

The Devil Wears Rothko charts the explosive demise of Knoedler Gallery, one of New York’s oldest and most prestigious art galleries, with detailed and salacious insight into the art fraud scandal of the century.

222 pp. - History

Dinner with King Tut: How Rogue Archaeologists Are Re-creating the Sights, Sounds, Smells, and Tastes of Lost Civilizations
Sam Kean

From “one of America’s smartest and most charming writers” (NPR), an archaeological romp through the entire history of humankind—and through all five senses—from tropical Polynesian islands to forbidding arctic ice floes, and everywhere in between.

452 pp. - Science

The Director
Daniel Kehlmann

From “one of the brightest, most pleasure-giving writers at work today” (Jeffrey Eugenides, Pulitzer Prize–winning author), a visionary tale inspired by the life of film director G.W. Pabst, who fled to Hollywood to resist the Nazis only to be forced to return to his homeland and create propaganda films for the German Reich.

333 pp. - Fiction

Dirty Linen: The Troubles in My Home Place
Martin Doyle

Martin Doyle, Books Editor of The Irish Times, offers a personal, intimate history of the Troubles seen through the microcosm of a single rural parish, his own, part of both the Linen Triangle–heartland of the North's defining industry–and the Murder Triangle–the Badlands roamed by the Glenanne gang of security forces colluding with loyalist paramilarites.

351 pp. - History

The Disenlightenment: Politics, Horror, and Entertainment
David Mamet

One of America's greatest living literary legends invites you think for yourself in this compelling narrative of manipulation, power, and the human condition.

Instant New York Times Bestseller

238 pp. - Politics

The Doorman
Chris Pavone

A pulse-pounding novel of class, privilege, sex, and murder, from the New York Times bestselling author of Two Nights in Lisbon and The Expats.

388 pp. - Fiction

The Emperor of Gladness
Ocean Vuong

Ocean Vuong returns with a bighearted novel about chosen family, unexpected friendship, and the stories we tell ourselves in order to survive.

Oprah's Book Club Pick; Instant New York Times Bestseller

402 pp. - Fiction

Encounters: Denise Scott Brown Photographs
Izzy Kornblatt (Edtor)

The first publication dedicated to the perceptive photographic oeuvre of one of the most important postwar architects and co-author of the influential Learning from Las Vegas

433 pp. - Art, Architecture & Design

Endling
Maria Reva

Set in Ukraine, an eccentric scientist breeding rare snails crosses paths with sisters posing as members of the marriage industry to find their activist mother. As Russia invades, they embark on a wild journey with kidnapped bachelors and a last-of-its-kind snail. This darkly comic novel explores survival, love, and hope in times of encroaching darkness.

338 pp. - Fiction

An Enemy in the Village
Martin Walker

A real estate agent’s death sends shockwaves through the idyllic town of St. Denis, leading Bruno, Chief of Police, to suspect that there’s more to this tragedy than meets the eye.

289 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

Eventually Everything Connects: Mid-Century Modern Design in the US
Andrew Satake Blauvelt, Bridget Bartal

An expansive account of the ever-popular mid-century movement, from the place where it all began.

463 pp. - Art, Architecture & Design

Exit Zero
Marie-Helene Bertino

Twelve delightfully strange, haunting stories from the acclaimed, oracular author of Beautyland

191 pp. - Fiction

An Eye for an Eye
Jeffrey Archer

In one of the most luxurious cities on earth, a billion-dollar deal is about to go badly wrong. A lavish night out is about to end in murder. And the British government is about to be plunged into crisis. Lord Hartley, the latest in a line of peers going back over two hundred years, lies dying. But his will triggers an inheritance with explosive consequences. Two deaths. Continents apart. No obvious connection. So why are they both at the centre of a master criminal's plot for revenge? And can Scotland Yard's elite squad uncover the truth before it's too late?

373 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

Family Spirit
Diane McKinney-Whetstone

Diane McKinney-Whetstone’s latest character-rich, page-turner blends her signature style with a little magic in her depiction of the Maces, a vibrant family of Philadelphia clairvoyants with issues.

245 pp. - Fiction

A Far Better Thing
H. G. Parry

Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell meets A Tale of Two Cities in H. G. Parry’s A Far Better Thing, a heart-rending fantasy of faery revenge set during the French Revolution.

416 pp. - Fiction

Fashion & Interiors: A Gendered Affair
Romy Cockx, Robin Schuldenfrei, Lara Steinhäußer

Exploring fashion and interior design through a gender lens, from the Victorian era to contemporary designers like Martin Margiela and Raf Simons

223 pp. - Art, Architecture & Design

The Fate of the Day: The War for America, Fort Ticonderoga to Charleston, 1777-1780
Rick Atkinson

In the second volume of the landmark American Revolution trilogy by the bestselling author of The British Are Coming, George Washington’s army fights on the knife edge between victory and defeat.

854 pp. - Fiction

Fever Beach
Carl Hiaasen

Another instant classic from Carl Hiaasen—laugh-out-loud funny, tackling the current chaotic and polarized American culture (following in the path of Squeeze Me), with two wonderful Hiaasen heroes.

367 pp. - Fiction

Flashes of Brilliance: The Genius of Early Photography and How It Transformed Art, Science, and History
Anika Burgess

The story of the wildest experiments in early photography and the wild people who undertook them.

322 pp. - History

Flashlight
Susan Choi

A novel tracing a father’s disappearance across time, nations, and memory, from the author of Trust Exercise.

450 pp. - Fiction

Flesh
David Szalay

From Booker Prize finalist and “the shrewdest writer on contemporary masculinity we have” (Esquire), a “captivating...hypnotic...virtuosic” (The Baffler) novel about a man whose life veers off course due to a series of unforeseen circumstances.

Longlisted for the 2025 Booker Prize

353 pp. - Fiction

A Flood of Pictures: The Formation of a Picture Culture in the United States
Michael Leja

Explores how the widespread circulation of pictures reshaped a nineteenth-century US culture that was accustomed to printed and spoken words

394 pp. - History

A Flower Traveled in My Blood: The Incredible True Story of the Grandmothers Who Fought to Find a Stolen Generation of Children
Haley Cohen Gilliland

A remarkable new talent in narrative nonfiction delivers the epic true story of a group of courageous grandmothers who fought to find their grandchildren who were stolen.

472 pp. - Nonfiction

Fonseca
Jessica Francis Kane

The story acclaimed English author Penelope Fitzgerald never wrote, of her real-life journey to Mexico with her son in search of a much-needed inheritance, by Jessica Francis Kane, bestselling author of Rules for Visiting

257 pp. - Fiction

Fresh Water for Flowers
Valérie Perrin

An eccentric young caretaker brings exuberant life to a smalltown French cemetery in this #1 international bestselling novel: "Enchanting" (Publishers Weekly).

483 pp. - Fiction

Fresh, Green Life
Sebastian Castillo

After a year of self-imposed exile, a young writer attends a New Year’s Eve party in hopes of reconnecting with old classmates in a blackly humorous tale set on a single snowy night

142 pp. - Fiction

The Game Is Murder
Hazell Ward

In this fresh and immersive murder mystery that riffs on crime classics, the reader is put in the role of the Great Detective, reinvestigating an infamous never-before-solved case from 1970s England.

442 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

Gingko Season
Naomi Xu Elegant

For readers of Elif Batuman and Sally Rooney, a beguiling debut novel about finding oneself after heartbreak. This wise and tenderhearted novel explores the nature of our deepest friendships as seriously as it does the dizzying terror and thrill of falling in love, and the complications of trying to live a life that matches your ideals.

250 pp. - Fiction

The Gods of New York: Egotists, Idealists, Opportunists, and the Birth of the Modern City: 1986-1990
Jonathan Mahler

A sweeping chronicle of four tumultuous years in 1980s New York that changed the city forever—and anticipated the forces that would soon divide the nation—from the bestselling author of Ladies and Gentlemen, the Bronx Is Burning

451 pp. - History

Golden Age Bibliomysteries
Otto Penzler

In these classic mystery tales, literature is a matter of life or death.

426 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

The Good Liar
Denise Mina

In this provocative mystery from beloved crime writer Denise Mina, new evidence in an old murder case forces one woman to make an impossible choice.

254 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

The Gorgeous Inertia of the Earth
Adrian Duncan

In this moving new novel, award-winning Irish writer Adrian Duncan explores love and grief while finding their resonance in works of art.

218 pp. - Fiction

Grand Finales: The Creative Longevity of Women Artists
Susan Gubar

One of our most formidable literary critics explores how nine women artists flourished creatively in their final acts.

368 pp. - Nonfiction

The Grave in the Ice
Satu Rämö

Detective Hildur Rúnarsdottir and her trainee Jakob are plagued by their own demons while working on the chilly west coast of Iceland: Hildur by the disappearance of her younger sisters twenty-five years ago and Jakob by a custody battle that has left him unable to see his son. When a local politician is found shot dead on a ski trail, the two must put aside their personal problems to investigate the murder. While initially thought to be a crime of passion, there are much darker secrets hiding beneath the surface. Hildur and Jakob soon realise that even the dead can't stay buried forever.

338 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

The Graves Are Walking: The Great Famine and the Saga of the Irish People
John Kelly

A magisterial account of one of the worst disasters to strike humankind--the Great Irish Potato Famine--conveyed as lyrical narrative history from the acclaimed author of The Great Mortality

397 pp. - History

The Great Miscalculation: The Race to Save New York City's Citicorp Tower
Michael M. Greenburg

How an engineering crisis threatened a career, a building, and the lives of countless New Yorkers.

237 pp. - History

Grieving: Dispatches from a Wounded Country
Cristina Rivera Garza

By one of Mexico's greatest contemporary writers, this investigation into state violence and mourning gives voice to the political experience of collective pain. Translated by Sarah Booker 

 

182 pp. - Nonfiction

The Guards
Ken Bruen

Praised by authors and critics around the globe, The Guards is the first novel in the Jack Taylor series and heralded the arrival of prominent Irish writer Ken Bruen as an essential voice in contemporary crime fiction.

An Edgar Award Nominee for Best Novel.

291 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

Heart Lamp
Banu Mushtaq

In the twelve stories of Heart Lamp, Banu Mushtaq exquisitely captures the everyday lives of women and girls in Muslim communities in southern India.

Winner of the 2025 International Booker Prize

 

216 pp. - Fiction

Heart, Be at Peace
Donal Ryan

From one of the most acclaimed Irish writers today, a new novel about smalltown Ireland that explores a community on the mend and the power of love and trauma to both bring people together and divide them.

Winner of the Irish Book of the Year; Shortlisted for the Nero Novel of the Year; A New York Times Book Review Editor’s Choice

196 pp. - Fiction

Her Final Gamble
Mary V. Slinkard

With her reputation on the line, one woman must make the ultimate gamble to save her career, her client, and a young boy's life.

298 pp. - Fiction

Historic Building Mythbusting: Uncovering Folklore, History and Archaeology
James Wright

Go to any ancient building in the land and there will be interesting and exciting stories presented to the visitor. Buildings archaeologist James Wright explains and unpicks the development of these myths and investigates the underlying truths behind them. Sometimes the realities hiding behind the stories are even more engaging, romantic and compelling than the myths themselves.

228 pp. - History

Homes for Living: The Fight for Social Housing and a New American Commons
Jonathan Tarleton

A tale of 2 NYC affordable housing co-ops’ struggle over privatization, public goods, and the future of American housing

261 pp. - Nonfiction

The Human Scale
Lawrence Wright

In this sweeping, timely thriller, a Palestinian American FBI agent teams up with a hardline Israeli cop to solve the murder of the Israeli police chief in Gaza—from the Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Looming Tower and The End of October.

429 pp. - Fiction

I Gave You Eyes and You Looked Toward Darkness
Irene Solà
162 pp. - Fiction

I Know How This Ends
Holly Smale

If you knew how your life would turn out, what would you change now?

The second brilliantly uplifting and page-turning novel from the multi-million bestselling author of Geek Girl and Reese's Book Club Pick Cassandra in Reverse.

358 pp. - Fiction

I Regret Almost Everything
Keith McNally

The entertaining, irreverent, and surprisingly moving memoir by the visionary restaurateur behind such iconic New York institutions as Balthazar and Pastis.

New York Times Bestseller

303 pp. - Biography

I Seek a Kind Person: My Father, Seven Children, and the Adverts that Helped Them Escape the Holocaust
Julian Borger

This gripping family memoir of grief, courage, and hope tells the hidden stories of children who escaped the Holocaust, building connections across generations and continents.

285 pp. - Biography

I'll Be Right Here
Amy Bloom

A sweeping, intimate novel about an unconventional and irresistible family, in prose “so finely wrought it shimmers” (Los Angeles Times)—from the New York Times bestselling author of In Love, White Houses, and Away.

National Bestseller

254 pp. - Fiction

I'm Not Your Muse: Uncovering the Overshadowed Brilliance of Women Artists & Visionaries
Lori Zimmer

An illuminating exploration of 31 incredible women—across art, architecture, dance, literature, and more—whose culture-defining contributions have, until now, been overshadowed by their role as "muses" to history's better-known men.

188 pp. - Biography

Ida B. Wells: Journalist, Advocate & Crusader for Justice
Erica Armstrong Dunbar

Meet journalist and activist Ida B. Wells in this second vibrant middle grade biography in the Rise. Risk. Remember. Incredible Stories series spotlighting Black women who left their mark on history from acclaimed and New York Times bestselling author Erica Armstrong Dunbar and Candace Buford.

136 pp. - Youth

An Inside Job
Daniel Silva

Art restorer and legendary spy Gabriel Allon must solve the perfect crime in the dazzling new tale of murder, greed, and corruption from #1 New York Times bestselling novelist Daniel Silva.

399 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

Intimacies
Lucy Caldwell

In eleven stories, Intimacies exquisitely charts the steps and missteps of young women trying to find their place in the world. From a Belfast student ordering illegal drugs online to end an unwanted pregnancy to a young mother's brush with mortality, and from a Christmas Eve walking the city centre streets when everything seems possible, to a night flight from Canada which could change a life irrevocably, these are stories of love, loss and exile, of new beginnings and lives lived away from 'home'.

Includes the winner of the 2021 BBC National Short Story Award

158 pp. - Fiction

The Invention of Design: A Twentieth-Century History
Maggie Gram

From a brilliant cultural historian, “a secret history of the twentieth century” (Louis Menand) told through the story of design and its utopian promises.

322 pp. - Miscellaneous

Invincible: Fathers and Mothers of Black America
Wade Hudson (Author), E. B. Lewis (Illustrator)

This lyrical picture book explores the birth of Black America, focusing on the little-known men and women who fought for justice and for an America where freedom truly rang for all.

40 pp. - Youth

An Irish Lineage: A Brief Historical Narrative of the Gifford, Glascott, Elmes, Symes and Brownrigg Families in Ireland, and Their Wider Connections
Rosemary Gifford, J. Martin

A brief historical narrative of the Gifford, Glascott, Symes, Elmes and Brownrigg families in Ireland, and their wider connections (including the Chamneys, Hartricks, Swans and others).

211 pp. - Miscellaneous

The Killing of the Tinkers
Ken Bruen

Ken Bruen wowed critics and readers alike when he introduced Jack Taylor in The Guards; now he's back with The Killing of the Tinkers, a novel of gritty brilliance that cements Bruen's place among the greats of modern crime fiction.

Winner of the Macavity Award for Best Mystery Novel

244 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

The Killing Sense
Sam Blake

Single Mum Kate Wilde has escaped an abusive marriage and hasn't had a holiday in years, so when she wins a five-day trip to Paris to learn about perfume - in a competition she can't remember entering - it's a dream come true. Or is it? Almost as soon as she arrives, Kate's ex texts with evidence that he's in Paris too. Kate can feel she's being watched, and she's sure someone has been in her apartment. Then she discovers that there's a killer in the city focusing on red headed women like her. And his kill count is rising. Who should she fear the most? Can her instincts keep her safe?

500 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

Killing Stella
Marlen Haushofer

Never before in English, a gripping, razor-sharp novella of a fractured marriage, by the ferociously talented author of The Wall.

 

87 pp. - Fiction

King Charles III: 40 Years of Architecture
Clive Aslet

In King Charles III: 40 Years of Architecture, Clive Aslet offers a lively account of the King and his epic engagement with architecture since the ‘carbuncle’ speech of 1984.

236 pp. - Art, Architecture & Design

King of Ashes
S. A. Cosby

Award-winning, New York Times bestselling author S. A. Cosby returns with King of Ashes, a Godfather-inspired Southern crime epic and dazzling family drama.

333 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

Land of Mirrors
Maria Medem

Seeped in flamenco rhythms, a hero’s journey of love and hope.

332 pp. - Graphic Novel

The Last Great Dream: How Bohemians Became Hippies and Created the Sixties
Dennis McNally

From the New York Times bestselling author of A Long Strange Trip and the publicist of the Grateful Dead, a riveting social history of everything that led up to the 1960s counterculture movement.

420 pp. - History

Lawless: How the Supreme Court Runs on Conservative Grievance, Fringe Theories, and Bad Vibes
Leah Litman

Something is deeply rotten at the Supreme Court. How did we get here and what can we do about it? Crooked Media podcast host Leah Litman shines a light on the unabashed lawlessness embraced by conservative Supreme Court justices and shows us how to fight back.

Instant New York Times bestseller

311 pp. - Nonfiction

Let Me Go Mad in My Own Way
Elaine Feeney

Explores layers of violence, the lost voices of women, post-colonial repercussions of that violence and the way it can grip generations. Will the secrets revealed alter the course of Claire’s future, and can love exist in a place of pain?

301 pp. - Fiction

The Letter Carrier
Francesca Giannone

In a novel that has become a bestselling phenomenon in Italy, The Letter Carrier shows how a little town in southern Italy might be just like every town—with women and men, husband and wives, fathers and sons, mothers and daughters, all trying to navigate the world while staying true to their hearts.

404 pp. - Fiction

The Library of Babel
Jorge Luis Borges

This collection brings together many of Borges's greatest and most beloved stories, including 'The Garden of Forking Paths', 'The Book of Sand' and 'Shakespeare's Memory'.

156 pp. - Fiction

Life and Art: Essays
Richard Russo

A marvelous new essay collection from the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Somebody's Fool and The Destiny Thief.

189 pp. - Nonfiction

The Lilac People
Milo Todd

A moving and deeply humane story about a trans man who must relinquish the freedoms of prewar Berlin to survive first the Nazis then the Allies, all while protecting the ones he loves.

303 pp. - Fiction

The List of Suspicious Things
Jennie Godfrey

Maggie Thatcher is prime minister, drainpipe jeans are in, and Miv is convinced that her dad wants to move their family Down South. Because of the murders. Leaving Yorkshire and her best friend Sharon simply isn't an option, no matter the dangers lurking round their way; or the strangeness at home that started the day Miv's mum stopped talking. Perhaps if she could solve the case of the disappearing women, they could stay after all? So, Miv and Sharon decide to make a list: a list of all the suspicious people and things down their street. People they know. People they don't. But their search for the truth reveals more secrets in their neighbourhood, within their families - and between each other - than they ever thought possible. What if the real mystery Miv needs to solve is the one that lies much closer to home?

455 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

The Little Prince: And Letter to a Hostage
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

Antoine de Saint-Exupéry first published The Little Prince in 1943, only a year before his plane vanished over the Mediterranean during a reconnaissance mission. Nearly eighty years later, this fable of love and loneliness has lost none of its power.

118 pp. - Fiction

Lizard
Banana Yoshimoto

Six short stories by a Japanese woman writer known for her unusual themes. In "Blood and Water," a woman abandons the religious commune where she was raised, goes to the big city and finds another idol of worship, a charismatic lover. The story looks at the connection between spiritual and romantic fervor. By the author of Kitchen.

180 pp. - Fiction

Los Angeles Before the Freeways: Images of an Era 1850–1950
Arnold Hylen

Discover of a lost Los Angeles from an era before the freeways in this beautiful coffee table book from iconic architectural photographer Arnold Hylen.

191 pp. - Art, Architecture & Design

Lost Found Kept: A Memoir
Deborah Derrickson Kossmann

How does a psychologist fail to recognize that her intelligent, sensitive, and book-loving mother has created "the worst hoarder house ever seen?" After making the horrifying discovery that her mother had no water in her house for at least two years, Deborah Derrickson Kossmann begins the otherworldly excavation of a childhood home she hasn't been inside for three decades. Moving back and forth in time, from this surreal nightmare of an archaeological dig to recollecting her past and long buried family secrets, Kossmann seeks to untangle a web of complicated familial relationships. In her lyrical and unflinching quest, she comes to understand what's been lost, what's been found and what's been kept in both her own and her mother's life.

275 pp. - Biography

Love Forms
Claire Adam

Love Forms is a powerfully moving story of a woman in search of herself-a novel that rings with heartfelt empathy through the passages of a mother's life, depicting the enduring bonds of love, family, and home.

Longlisted for the 2025 Booker Prize

274 pp. - Fiction

Lyrebird
Jane Caro

Lyrebirds are brilliant mimics, so if they mimic a woman screaming in terror and begging for her life, they have witnessed a crime. But how does a young, hung over PHD student and a wet-behind-the-ears new detective, convince anyone that a native bird can be a reliable witness to a murder, especially when there is no body and no missing person? And what happens when they turn out to be right?

360 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

Maggie; or, A Man and a Woman Walk Into a Bar
Katie Yee

A Chinese American woman spins tragedy into comedy when her life falls apart in a taut, wry debut novel, “as playful as it is profound” (Alison Espach, author of The Wedding People)—perfect for fans of Joan Is Okay and Crying in H Mart.

200 pp. - Fiction

The Man Who Died Twice
Richard Osman

The second gripping novel in the New York Times bestselling Thursday Murder Club series, soon to be a major motion picture from Steven Spielberg at Amblin Entertainment.

New York Times Bestseller

372 pp. - Fiction

The Man Who Would Be King: Mohammed bin Salman and the Transformation of Saudi Arabia
Karen Elliott House

Based on exclusive interviews, an eye-opening biography of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS), head of the House of Saud, the calculating ruler of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and a central Middle East power broker.

289 pp. - Biography

The Manifesto House: Buildings that Changed the Future of Architecture
Owen Hopkins

Manifesto houses reflect new visions for how we can live. Often extreme and uncompromising, they are vehicles for innovation, new ideas, and new ways of doing things.

240 pp. - Art, Architecture & Design

Marble Hall Murders
Anthony Horowitz

Murder links past and present once again in this mind-boggling metafictional mystery from Anthony Horowitz featuring detective Atticus Pünd and editor Susan Ryeland, stars of the New York Times bestsellers Magpie Murders and Moonflower Murders.

582 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

Mark Twain
Ron Chernow

Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer Ron Chernow illuminates the full, fascinating, and complex life of the writer long celebrated as the father of American literature, Mark Twain

#1 New York Times Bestseller!

1,174 pp. - Biography

May All Your Skies Be Blue
Fíona Scarlett

From the author of the beloved debut Boys Don't Cry - an unforgettable story of love and loss and how the ones we love never really leave us.

247 pp. - Fiction

The Medusa Protocol
Rob Hart

Welcome back to Assassins Anonymous, the only twelve-step group where joining can be deadly.

306 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

The Metamorphosis
Franz Kafka

Often cited as one of the seminal works of fiction of the 20th century and widely studied in colleges and universities across the western world, this story begins with a traveling salesman, Gregor Samsa, waking to find himself transformed into an insect.

136 pp. - Fiction

Midnight on the Potomac: The Last Year of the Civil War, the Lincoln Assassination, and the Rebirth of America
Scott Ellsworth

From the author of The Ground Breaking, longlisted for the National Book Award, comes a riveting saga of the last year of the Civil War—and a revealing new account of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln.

320 pp. - History

Milkman
Anna Burns

Told with ferocious energy and sly, wicked humor, Milkman establishes Anna Burns as one of the most consequential voices of our day.

Winner of the Man Booker Prize

348 pp. - Fiction

The Mini Rough Guide to Bologna
Justin McDonnell

This mini pocket travel guidebook is perfect for travellers looking for essential information about Bologna. It provides details on key places and main attractions, along with a selection of itineraries, recommendations for restaurants and top tips on how to make the most of your trip.

144 pp. - Travel

The Mini Rough Guide to London
Libby Davies

This mini pocket London travel guidebook is perfect for travellers looking for essential information about London. It provides details on key places and main attractions, along with a selection of itineraries, recommendations for restaurants and top tips on how to make the most of your trip.

152 pp. - Travel

The Mini Rough Guide to Riga
Joanna Reeves

This mini pocket Riga travel guidebook is perfect for travellers looking for essential information about Riga. It provides details on key places and main attractions, along with a selection of itineraries, recommendations for restaurants and top tips on how to make the most of your trip. It's sustainably printed to ensure environmental responsibility.

144 pp. - Travel

Misbehaving at the Crossroads: Essays & Writings
Honoree Fanonne Jeffers

The New York Times-bestselling, National Book Award-nominated author of The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois and The Age of Phillis makes her nonfiction debut with this personal and thought-provoking work that explores the journeys and possibilities of Black women throughout American history and in contemporary times.

352 pp. - History

Misinterpretation
Ledia Xhoga

Ruminative and propulsive, Ledia Xhoga’s debut novel, Misinterpretation, interrogates the darker legacies of family and country, and the boundary between compassion and self-preservation.

Longlisted for the 2025 Booker Prize; Winner of the 2024 New York City Book Award; Finalist for the 2024 Center for Fiction First Novel Prize

287 pp. - Fiction

Modern Comfort Food: A Barefoot Contessa Cookbook
Ina Garten

A collection of all-new soul-satisfying dishes from America’s favorite home cook!

256 pp. - Miscellaneous

The Moment: Thoughts on the Race Reckoning That Wasn't and How We All Can Move Forward Now
Bakari Sellers

The New York Times bestselling author of My Vanishing Country examines the modern political landscape and policies that are impacting Black families and communities and offers solutions for a better tomorrow.

180 pp. - Nonfiction

Monopoly X: How Top-Secret World War II Operations Used the Game of Monopoly to Help Allied POWs Escape, Conceal Spies, and Send Secret Codes
Philip E. Orbanes

An amazing true story of World War II that reveals how British and American military intelligence successfully smuggled escape aids into German P.O.W. camps hidden inside Monopoly game boards, and also the game’s surprising role in espionage.

285 pp. - History

Mr Salary
Sally Rooney

Sally Rooney is one of the most acclaimed young talents of recent years. With her minute attention to the power dynamics in everyday speech, she builds up sexual tension and throws a deceptively low-key glance at love and death.

33 pp. - Fiction

Multitudes
Lucy Caldwell

From Belfast to London and back again the eleven stories that comprise Caldwell's first collection explore the many facets of growing up - the pain and the heartache, the tenderness and the joy, the fleeting and the formative - or 'the drunkenness of things being various'. Stories of longing and belonging, they culminate with the heart-wrenching and unforgettable title story.

170 pp. - Youth

Murder Takes a Vacation
Laura Lippman

Highly acclaimed New York Times bestselling author Laura Lippman returns with an irresistible mystery featuring Muriel Blossom, a former private investigator and middle-aged widow whose vacation on a Parisian river cruise turns into a deadly international mystery…that only she can solve. 

261 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

My Clavicle: And Other Massive Misalignments
Marta Sanz

On an international flight to a writer’s conference, the writer Marta Sanz notices a tiny bump, something she calls a tick, on her chest, just below her clavicle, near her breast bone.

175 pp. - Fiction

My Friends
Fredrik Backman

#1 New York Times bestselling author Fredrik Backman returns with an unforgettably funny, deeply moving tale of four teenagers whose friendship creates a bond so powerful that it changes a complete stranger’s life twenty-five years later.

436 pp. - Fiction

My Garden: A Year of Design and Experimentation
Jacqueline van der Kloet

A month-by-month tour of the renowned naturalistic garden designer Jacqueline van der Kloet's home garden—a visual feast of perennials, trees, grasses, shrubs, and bulbs that have inspired a generation of gardeners and designers.

323 pp. - Miscellaneous

My Name Is Emilia del Valle
Isabel Allende

A riveting tale of self-discovery and love from one of the most masterful storytellers of our time, My Name Is Emilia del Valle introduces a character who will never let hold of your heart.

National Bestseller

287 pp. - Fiction

My Other Heart
Emma Nanami Strenner

A missing child, two girls in search of their true identities--a stunning novel of mothers, daughters and best friends.

A Read with Jenna Pick

406 pp. - Fiction

My Sister and Other Lovers
Esther Freud

For as long as Lucy can remember, she's been caught between love for her rootless mother and devotion to her fierce and exacting sister, Bea. From their peripatetic childhood to their restless teenage years--hitching through rural Ireland, the move to a communal house--she's been forced to make a choice between these two very different ways of approaching life. But as the girls come of age and embark on their own experiments--in love, drugs, work, motherhood--Bea is at risk of drifting further and further away. Can their loyalty to each other transcend the damages of a past that feels almost too dangerous to examine?

277 pp. - Fiction

My Therapist Says This Grief Journal Is a Good Idea
Andrew Katz

When his father’s suicide turns his life upside down, KJ fills his therapist-recommended grief journal with plenty of sarcasm, excerpts from sweary, punny high-school short stories, and fourth-wall-breaking asides. Through all the bravado and swagger, a portrait emerges of a young man confronting a dark past with genuine compassion and keen insight. He’s determined to reconcile with its legacy–and to survive.

pp. - Fiction

Nabokov's Dozen: Thirteen Stories
Vladimir Nabokov

Thirteen strangely wrought, ingeniously crafted stories make up Nabokov's baker's dozen. In some of these stories shadowy people pass through, cooped up by life, with nowhere to escape to. Their dreams lie stifled, smothered by routine and repetition, and frustrations lurk in all the corners.

256 pp. - Fiction

The Names
Florence Knapp

With exceptional sensitivity and depth, Knapp draws us into the story of one family, told through a prism of what-ifs, causing us to consider the "one . . . precious life" we are given. The book’s brilliantly imaginative structure, propulsive storytelling, and emotional, gut-wrenching power are certain to make The Names a modern classic.

328 pp. - Fiction

The New York Times Cultured Traveler: 100 Trips for Curious Minds from Agadir to Yogyakarta
Barbara Ireland (Editor)

Wander the halls of Italy's Renaissance libraries, revel in the Sahara's imposing silence as described by Paul Bowles, or stroll the streets of Josephine Baker's Paris. The writers and photographers of The New York Times are your guides to the history, literature, art, or cuisine of a destination in 100 stories from the Cultured Traveler column.

679 pp. - Travel

Next To Heaven
James Frey

Uncover the dark underbelly of the American dream America’s most perfect town, in this “lurid” and “propulsive” novel from #1 New York Times bestselling author James Frey (New York Times Book Review Podcast)–and discover a world where privilege, sex, scandal, and murder lurk beneath a flawless veneer.

324 pp. - Fiction

The Night She Disappeared
Lisa Jewell

From the #1 New York Times bestselling author of None of This Is True comes “her best thriller yet” (Harlan Coben) about a young couple’s disappearance on a gorgeous summer night, and the mother who will never give up trying to find them.

Athenaeum Mystery Book Club Pick

416 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

Nightshade
Michael Connelly

Introducing Detective Stilwell: a cop relentlessly following his mission in the seemingly idyllic setting of Catalina Island.

343 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

No Offense: A Memoir in Essays
Jackie Domenus

When Jackie "came out" in 2014, right as the Trump era was revving up, she began paying closer attention to the inappropriate questions, uncomfortable reactions, and pointed assumptions about sexuality and gender she was witnessing and now experiencing firsthand. NO OFFENSE takes a magnifying glass to subtle moments that many people don't recognize as homophobic or transphobic, exploring the impact of microaggressions on LGBTQ+ folks. Blending personal essay and cultural critique, the collection confronts society's reactions to queerness at poignant moments in Jackie's life, from wedding planning to OBGYN appointments to the Pulse Nightclub Massacre, and beyond. Revealing the complex and tender moments that sculpted their identity from a tomboy adolescence to gender exploration as an adult, NO OFFENSE analyzes the loaded conversations queer and trans folks face every day on topics like labels, haircuts, Halloween costumes, and more.

184 pp. - Biography

Obelists En Route
C. Daly King

The discovery of a corpse turns a cross-country train journey into a closed-circle hunt for a killer.

344 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

The Odessa File
Frederick Forsyth

#1 New York Times bestselling author Frederick Forsyth’s unforgettable novel of evil personified and one man’s determination to destroy it once and for all. . .

337 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

On Air: The Triumph and Tumult of NPR
Steve Oney

An epic reported history of National Public Radio that reveals the unlikely story of one of America’s most celebrated but least understood media empires.

566 pp. - History

One Boat
Jonathan Buckley

On losing her father, Teresa returns to a small town on the Greek coast - the same place she visited when grieving her mother nine years ago. She immerses herself again in the life of the town, observing the inhabitants going about their business, a quiet backdrop for her reckoning with herself. An episode from her first visit resurfaces vividly - her encounter with John, a man struggling to come to terms with the violent death of his nephew. Soon Teresa encounters some of the people she met last time around: Petros, an eccentric mechanic, whose life story may or may not be part of John's; the beautiful Niko, a diving instructor; and Xanthe, a waitress in one of the cafés on the leafy town square. They talk about their longings, regrets, the passing of time, their sense of who they are.

Longlisted for the Booker Prize 2025.

166 pp. - Fiction

Openings
Lucy Caldwell

From a passionate affair in Blitz-era London, to a highly charged Christmas party in Belfast, to a trip to Marrakech which could form a new family, the thirteen striking stories of Openings pulse with possibility and illuminate those fleeting but recognisable moments of heartbreak and hope that can change the course of a life.

238 pp. - Fiction

Optional Practical Training
Shubha Sunder

An elegantly inventive debut novel that offers a sharp new take on the immigrant story in post-9/11 America.

211 pp. - Fiction

Ordinary Saints
Niamh Ní Mhaoileoin

An unmissable, award-winning exploration of family, grief, queer identity, and the legacy of the Catholic Church in Ireland.

352 pp. - Fiction

The Original
Nell Stevens

In a grand English country house in 1899, an aspiring art forger must unravel whether the man claiming to be her long-lost cousin is an impostor.

 

328 pp. - Fiction

Orlando: A Biography
Virginia Woolf

Written for the charismatic, bisexual writer Vita Sackville-West, Orlando is one of Woolf's most popular and accessible novels, a playful mock biography of a chameleon-like historical figure that is both a wry commentary on gender and, in Woolf's own words, a "writer's holiday" that delights in its ambiguity and capriciousness.

272 pp. - Fiction

Our Wives Under the Sea
Julia Armfield

Leah is changed. Months earlier, she left for a routine expedition, only this time her submarine sank to the sea floor. When she finally surfaces and returns home, her wife Miri knows that something is wrong. Barely eating and lost in her thoughts, Leah rotates between rooms in their apartment, running the taps morning and night. As Miri searches for answers, desperate to understand what happened below the water, she must face the possibility that the woman she loves is slipping from her grasp. By turns elegiac and furious, wry and heartbreaking, Our Wives Under the Sea is a genre-bending exploration of the depths of love and grief at the heart of a marriage.

Athenaeum Read with Us Book Club Pick; Finalist for the LAMBDA Literary Award &  Goodreads Choice Award

228 pp. - Fiction

The Painter's Fire: A Forgotten History of the Artists Who Championed the American Revolution
Zara Anishanslin

Told through the lives of three remarkable artists devoted to the pursuit of liberty, an illuminating new history of the ideals that fired the American Revolution.

375 pp. - History

The Palace at the End of the Sea
Simon Tolkien

A young man comes of age and crosses continents in search of an identity—and a cause—at the dawn of the Spanish Civil War in a thrilling, timely, and emotional historical saga.

453 pp. - Fiction

Palestine
Joe Sacco

Sacco captures the heart of the Palestinian experience in image after unforgettable image, with great insight and remarkable humour. The nine-issue comics series won a 1996 American Book Award.

288 pp. - Graphic Novel

Parallel Lines
Edward St. Aubyn

From the bestselling and award-winning author of the Patrick Melrose novels, a hilarious and moving story about a group of wildly different characters whose fates are improbably yet inextricably linked—a novel about extinction and survival, inheritance and loss, written with St. Aubyn’s trademark wit and inimitable style

264 pp. - Fiction

Parallel Lives: A Love Story from a Lost Continent
Iain Pears

Best-selling novelist and art historian Iain Pears enchants readers with the real-life romance between Larissa Salmina, a Russian art curator, and Francis Haskell, a British art historian. His fabulous book brings into sharp focus the strange world of the Soviet Union, and the even stranger world of a certain variety of the English elite. It seeks to show how leaving the Soviet Union was a sacrifice for her and how it was the English man, not the Russian woman, who was set free because of their meeting. An extraordinary love story of two unlikely figures played out against the backdrop of the Cold War.

 

271 pp. - Biography

The Passengers on the Hankyu Line
Hiro Arikawa

Welcome aboard the Hankyu Line train!

Come along on a heartwarming, funny, and perfectly cozy voyage with the charming and relatable passengers—including one dashing dachshund—whose lives intersect and affect each other on one of Japan’s most romantic railway lines from international bestselling author Hiro Arikawa.

234 pp. - Fiction

Patterned Brick Architecture of West New Jersey
Robert L. Thompson

Attempts to answer the vexing question of why the great preponderance of America’s patterned brick architecture is located in the ancient colony of West New Jersey, a land mass covering roughly half of present-day New Jersey. Thompson expands his story well beyond southern New Jersey, beginning in England, searching for the antecedents, both practical and artistic, to this folk-art. He also examines the patterned brick architecture found in other American colonies and its meaning vis-a-vis those building found in West New Jersey.

194 pp. - History

Paul Auster's The New York Trilogy: City of Glass, Ghosts, The Locked Room
Paul Auster (Author), Paul Karasik (Illustrator), Lorenzo Mattotti (Illustrator), David Mazzucchelli (Illustrator)

From award-winning novelist Paul Auster comes the graphic adaptation of his deeply beloved series, The New York Trilogy, a postmodern take on detective and noir fiction.

398 pp. - Graphic Novel

Penelope's Bones: A New History of Homer’s World through the Women Written Out of It
Emily Hauser

Weaving together literary and archaeological evidence, Emily Hauser illuminates the rich, intriguing lives of the real women behind Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey.

467 pp. - History

People Like Us
Jason Mott

People Like Us is Jason Mott’s electric new novel. It is not memoir, yet it has deeply personal connections to Jason’s life. And while rooted in reality, it explodes with dreamlike experiences that pull a reader in and don’t let go, from the ability to time travel to sightings of sea monsters and peacocks, and feelings of love and memory so real they hurt.

270 pp. - Fiction

Persuasion of Place: The Work of Cecil Baker Architect
Cecil Baker

Cecil Baker has designed some of the most prominent buildings in Philadelphia's recent history. Moving fluidly between scales, building types, and price points, his office helped shape the evolution of Philadelphia's City Center and set modernist precedents in its traditionally minded suburbs and beyond. This collection contains 35 of his finest projects, all of which embody the ethos of "persuasion of place."

421 pp. - Art, Architecture & Design

Philadelphia, the Revolutionary City
American Philosophical Society (Editor)

Published on the occasion of the exhibition Philadelphia, the revolutionary city, April 11-December 28, 2025.

108 pp. - History

Phytopolis: The Living City
Stefano Mancuso

A renowned plant expert explains how we can make urgent, positive changes to our cities that protect against and reduce global warming.

196 pp. - Nonfiction

The Politics of Sorrow: Unity and Allegiance Across Tibetan Exile
Tsering Wangmo Dhompa

Tells the story of the Group of Thirteen, a collective of chieftains and lamas from the regions of Kham and Amdo, who sought to preserve Tibet’s cultural diversity in exile. A compelling narrative of a tumultuous time that reveals the complexities of Tibetan identities then and now.

349 pp. - History

Promised Lands: Hadassah Kaplan and the Legacy of American Jewish Women in Early Twentieth-Century Palestine
Sharon Ann Musher

Promised Lands provides a window into the lives of American Jewish women in both New York City’s Upper West Side and Palestine during the interwar period.

263 pp. - Biography

Purge and Bleed: Philadelphia's Yellow Fever Epidemic and the Stagnation of American Medicine
Marshall Foletta

Explaining the deadly stasis of American medicine in the nineteenth century

270 pp. - History

Queer Moderns: Max Ewing's Jazz Age New York
Alice T. Friedman

A richly illustrated history of the glittering world of queer artistic life in the 1920s and ’30s.

269 pp. - History

The Red Shore
William Shaw

Met detective Eden Driscoll never wanted a child, but when his estranged sister vanishes from her sailboat, he is asked to look after her son Finn - the nephew he hadn't even known existed. Resettled in the seaside town of Teignmouth, Eden adjusts to his newfound parenthood. Then Finn disappears from school, and Eden knows something is dreadfully wrong. When Eden's sister's body is finally found, floating in the sea, local police rule her death an accident, but Eden isn't convinced. She was an experienced sailor and would never sail without a life jacket. Eden starts searching his sister's life for answers, and what he discovers changes everything.

371 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

Red Water
Jurica Pavičić

A woman disappears after a beach party, and the search for her reveals Croatia's complex history well beyond the fall of Communism.

317 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

The Revelation of Ireland: 1995-2020
Diarmaid Ferriter

A masterful history of a country transformed over 25 years, from Ireland's most distinguished historian.

552 pp. - History

The River Is Waiting
Wally Lamb

#1 New York Times bestselling author Wally Lamb, celebrated for two prior Oprah Book Club selections, returns with an exceptional third pick, a propulsive novel following a young father grappling with unbearable tragedy as he searches for hope, redemption, and the possibility of forgiveness.

466 pp. - Fiction

The Roma: A Traveling History
Madeline Potter

A unique, deeply personal portrait of the nomadic Romani people and their on-going journey that sheds new light on their history, where they have traveled and settled, and what it means to be Romani today.

253 pp. - History

Rot: An Imperial History of the Irish Famine
Padraic X. Scanlan

A “vigorous and engaging” (Fintan O’Toole, New Yorker) new history of the Irish Great Famine, showing how the British Empire caused Ireland’s most infamous disaster

340 pp. - History

The Rough Guide to Greece
Rough Guides

This guide to Greece is compiled by a dozen expert contributors and provides in-depth coverage of every attraction, from Delphic antiquities to Athens night life.

816 pp. - Travel

Run for the Hills
Kevin Wilson

An unexpected road trip across America brings a family together, in this raucous and moving new novel from the bestselling author of Nothing to See Here.

244 pp. - Fiction

Sargent and Paris
Stephanie L. Herdrich

A fascinating look at John Singer Sargent’s formative years as a young painter in Paris, a city that helped forge his artistic identity and sparked his rise to the pinnacle of the nineteenth-century art world.

255 pp. - Art, Architecture & Design

The Satisfaction Café
Kathy Wang

How do we live so that we are satisfied? How can people connect during moments of loneliness? This is the story of Joan Liang, a woman who moves across the world to America, and in trying to answer these questions builds a wildly original life.

340 pp. - Fiction

The Scrapbook
Heather Clark

From the award-winning author of Red CometThe Short Life and Blazing Art of Sylvia Plath, a stunning debut novel: the story of an intense first love haunted by history and family memory, inspired by the startling WWII scrapbook of Clark’s own grandfather, hidden in an attic until after his death.

244 pp. - Fiction

The Secret Life of a Cemetery: The Wild Nature and Enchanting Lore of Père-Lachaise
Benoît Gallot

Amidst the famous dead, whispers of ghost stories, and wild foxes lives Benoit Gallot, head curator of the world’s most storied cemetery in Paris.

221 pp. - Miscellaneous

Show Me Where it Hurts: Living with Invisible Illness
Kylie Maslen

Show Me Where It Hurts is a compelling, heartbreaking and ultimately life-affirming story of recovery and unexpected hope.

246 pp. - Fiction

The Sisterhood of Ravensbrück: How an Intrepid Band of Frenchwomen Resisted the Nazis in Hitler's All-Female Concentration Camp
Lynne Olson

The extraordinary true story of a small group of Frenchwomen, all Resistance members, who banded together in a notorious concentration camp to defy the Nazis—from the New York Times bestselling author of Madame Fourcade’s Secret War

367 pp. - Biography

Sketchbook Joy: How to embrace your creativity and fill your sketchbooks with colour
Katie Moody

Art can be accessible, so much fun and positive for your mental health, mindfulness, and memory. Kickstart your creative journey with this exciting guide to developing your art skills every day through your sketchbook.

159 pp. - Art, Architecture & Design

Sleep
Honor Jones

From a dazzling new talent, the story of a newly divorced young mother forced to reckon with the secrets of her own childhood when she brings her daughters back to the big house where she was raised.

262 pp. - Fiction

So Far Gone
Jess Walter

From the #1 New York Times bestselling author of Beautiful Ruins—and in the propulsive spirit of Charles Portis’ True Grit—comes a hilarious, empathetic, and brilliantly provocative adventure through life in modern America, about a reclusive journalist forced back into the world to rescue his kidnapped grandchildren.

National Bestseller

257 pp. - Fiction

Solar Bones
Mike McCormack

A masterwork that builds its own style and language one broken line at a time; the result is a visionary accounting of the now.

Longlisted for the 2017 Man Booker Prize; Winner of the Goldsmiths Prize; Winner of the Bord Gáis Energy Irish Book Awards Novel of the Year; An Irish Times Book Club Choice

217 pp. - Fiction

Solitude
Alex Opanasiuk

Alex Opanasiuk crafts a mesmerizing psychological thriller that challenges perception, embraces uncertainty, and leaves you questioning everything—right up until the final, haunting revelation.

183 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

Songs of No Provenance
Lydi Conklin

A suspenseful, wildly engaging debut novel by the award-winning author of Rainbow Rainbow, following a musician spiraling in self-doubt and self-searching after a night—and a relationship—gone wrong.

Longlisted for Center for Fiction's First Novel Prize

358 pp. - Fiction

The South
Tash Aw

A radiant, intimate novel of the longing that blooms between two boys over the course of one summer―about family, desire, and what we inherit.

Longlisted for the Booker Prize

282 pp. - Fiction

Spellbound: How Charisma Shaped American History from the Puritans to Donald Trump
Molly Worthen

What happens when Americans lose faith in their religious institutions—and politicians fill the void? From the Puritans to Donald Trump, this sweeping history will change your understanding of the forces that create leaders and hold their followers captive.

431 pp. - Politics

Spent: A Comic Novel
Alison Bechdel

The celebrated and beloved New York Times bestselling author of the modern classic Fun Home presents a laugh-out-loud, brilliant, and passionately political work of autofiction.

255 pp. - Graphic Novel

The Spinach King: The Rise and Fall of an American Dynasty
John Seabrook

The riveting saga of the Seabrook Family, by one of The New Yorkers most acclaimed storytellers.

346 pp. - Biography

Start Making Sense: How Existential Psychology Can Help Us Build Meaningful Lives in Absurd Times
Steven J. Heine

A "beautiful, deep, thoughtful" (Angela Duckworth, New York Times-bestselling author of Grit) investigation into the science of why we crave meaning—and how we can pursue it in this age of anxiety.

335 pp. - Miscellaneous

The Stolen Heart
Andrey Kurkov

In the follow-up to The Silver Bone, a Publishers Weekly Best Book of 2024, Samson Kolechko must rescue his kidnapped fiancée while investigating the illegal sale of meat in lawless 1920s Kyiv— based on a real-life case.

318 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

The Stolen Life of Colette Marceau
Kristin Harmel

Kristin Harmel, the New York Times bestselling author who “is the best there is at sweeping historical drama” (Kelly Harms, author of The Seven Day Switch), returns with an electrifying new novel about two jewel thieves, a priceless bracelet that disappears in 1940s Paris, and a quest for answers in a decades-old murder.

376 pp. - Fiction

The Story of Lucy Gault
William Trevor

The stunning novel from highly acclaimed author William Trevor is a brilliant, subtle, and moving story of love, guilt, and forgiveness.

227 pp. - Fiction

Strangers in the Land: Exclusion, Belonging, and the Epic Story of the Chinese in America
Michael Luo

From New Yorker writer Michael Luo comes a masterful narrative history of the Chinese in America that traces the sorrowful theme of exclusion and documents their more than century-long struggle to belong.

542 pp. - History

Street Haunting: A London Adventure
Virginia Woolf

In "Street Haunting," one of Virginia Woolf's most evocative essays, the streets of London come alive as the sun sets and the lights begin to glow. Woolf embarks on an introspective journey through the city, transforming an ordinary walk into an exploration of self and the vast tapestry of life that unfurls around her.

154 pp. - Nonfiction

The Summer House
Masashi Matsuie

This prize-winning debut novel offers a compelling, insightful portrait of modern Japan through a group of architects competing to design a major new building in Tokyo.

395 pp. - Fiction

Sunburn
Chloe Michelle Howarth

Two lovers are locked in a passionate game of cat and mouse. But instead of rules, this game has dark secrets, forbidden desires, inevitable betrayals, and cold-blooded murder.

288 pp. - Fiction

Surviving Wall Street: A Tale of Triumph, Tragedy, and Timing
Scott L. Bok

Portrays the dramatic transformation of the investment banking business in recent decades through the tumultuous saga of one firm (Greenhill & Co., a specialist in mergers and acquisitions) and one man (Scott Bok, the longtime CEO of that firm). Written in the style of an adventure tale, this book is also a "coming of age" story for a naive young man who came to Wall Street―as thousands like him do each year―and managed to grab a front-row seat for a period of epic change.

505 pp. - History

Susan Watkins and Women Artists of the Progressive Era
Corey Piper (Editor)

This survey of the life and work of American painter Susan Watkins explores how she and other women artists carved paths to success at the turn of the twentieth century.

166 pp. - Art, Architecture & Design

The Tao of Pooh & The Te of Piglet
Benjamin Hoff

An utterly unique and accessible introduction to the ancient principles of Taoism with the world's favourite bear, Winnie-the-Pooh and his friend Piglet.

158 pp. - Nonfiction

The Walk (A Stroll to the Poll)
Winsome Bingham (Author), E. B. Lewis (Illustrator)

From award-winning creators Winsome Bingham and E.B. Lewis, The Walk (A Stroll to the Poll) is a powerful picture book story celebrating a journey crucial to our democracy: the walk to vote. Perfect for sharing with young readers during election season.

40 pp. - Youth

The Tiny Things Are Heavier
Esther Ifesinachi Okonkwo

A heart-rending debut novel about a Nigerian immigrant as she tries to find her place at home and in America--a powerful epic about love, grief, family, and belonging.

276 pp. - Fiction

The Trial
Rob Rinder

When hero policeman Grant Cliveden dies from a poisoning in the Old Bailey, it threatens to shake the country to its core. The evidence points to one man. Jimmy Knight has been convicted of multiple offences before and defending him will be no easy task. Not least because this is trainee barrister Adam Green's first case. But it will quickly become clear that Jimmy Knight is not the only person in Cliveden's past with an axe to grind. The only thing that's certain is that this is a trial which will push Adam - and the justice system itself - to the limit...

359 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

Twelve Post-War Tales
Graham Swift

An exquisite new collection of stories from the Booker Prize–winning author, about lives shaped and haunted by war.

289 pp. - Fiction

The Undiscovered Country: Triumph, Tragedy, and the Shaping of the American West
Paul Andrew Hutton

From the author of The Apache Wars, the true story of the American West, revealing how American ambition clashed with the realities of violence and exploitation

565 pp. - History

Universality
Natasha Brown

Late one night on a Yorkshire farm, in the midst of an illegal rave, a young man is nearly bludgeoned to death with a solid gold bar. An ambitious young journalist sets out to uncover the truth surrounding the attack, connecting the dots between an amoral banker landlord, an iconoclastic columnist, and a radical anarchist movement that has taken up residence on the farm. She solves the mystery, but her viral exposé raises more questions than it answers, namely: Who wrote it? Why? And how much of it is true? Through a voyeuristic lens, and with a simmering power, it focuses in on words: what we say, how we say it, and what we really mean.

152 pp. - Fiction

The Unquiet Grave
Dervla McTiernan

For years the boglands of Northern Europe have given up bodies of the long-deceased. Bodies that are thousands of years old, uncannily preserved. Bodies with strange injuries that suggest ritual torture and human sacrifice. When a corpse is found in a bog in Galway, Cormac Reilly assumes the find is historical. But closer examination reveals a more recent story. The dead man is Thaddeus Grey, a local secondary school principal who disappeared two years prior. There's nothing in Grey's past that would explain why he was murdered, or why his body was mutilated in a ritual manner. At first, progress on the case is frustratingly slow and Cormac struggles to keep his mind on the job. His ex-girlfriend, Emma Sweeney, is in trouble, and she's reached out to him for help - Emma's new husband has gone missing in Paris, and the French police are refusing to open an investigation into his disappearance. Cormac is sure that he has found Grey's killer, and is within hours of an arrest, when another mutilated body is discovered on the other side of the country. Two days later, a third body is found. Press attention is intense. Is there a serial killer at work in Ireland? Has Cormac been on the wrong trail? And if so, can he find the murderer before they strike again?

360 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

The Unraveling of Julia
Lisa Scottoline

An international bestselling author crafts a gothic “thriller with dashes of romance and excellent twists!” (Karin Slaughter, New York Times bestselling author) in which a young widow inherits a Tuscan estate from a mysterious benefactor and finds herself thrust into the crosshairs of a dangerous conspiracy---twisty, transportive, and haunting, this is suspense with a passport.  

390 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

Vera, or Faith
Gary Shteyngart

A poignant, sharp-eyed, and bitterly funny tale of a family struggling to stay together in a country rapidly coming apart, told through the eyes of their wondrous ten-year-old daughter, by the bestselling author of Super Sad True Love Story and Our Country Friends

243 pp. - Fiction

Victim
Thomas Enger, Jørn Lier Horst

A cold case returns to haunt Blix, as a cold-blooded killer taunts him with evidence of further victims, while Ramm investigates a murder with no body… Blockbuster, explosive, No. 1 bestselling Nordic Noir.

342 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

We Are All Guilty Here
Karin Slaughter

The first thrilling mystery in the new North Falls series from Karin Slaughter, New York Times bestselling author of Pretty Girls and the Will Trent Series.

Welcome to North Falls—a small town where everyone knows everyone. Or so they think.

438 pp. - Mystery/Thriller

We Don't Talk About Carol
Kristen L. Berry

A dedicated journalist unearths a generations-old family secret—and a connection to a string of missing girls that hits way too close to home—in this “nail-biting debut” (Booklist).

328 pp. - Fiction

What Kind of Paradise
Janelle Brown

A teenage girl breaks free from her father’s world of isolation to discover that her whole life is a lie in this “absorbing and well-crafted” (The Washington Post) novel from the New York Times bestselling author of Pretty Things and Watch Me Disappear.

353 pp. - Fiction

When It All Burns: Fighting Fire in a Transformed World
Jordan Thomas

A hotshot firefighter’s gripping firsthand account of a record-setting fire season.

350 pp. - Nonfiction

The Widow's Guide to Dead Bastards
Jessica Waite

A lyrical exploration of mental health, single parenthood, and betrayal that demonstrates that the most moving love stories aren’t perfect—they’re flawed and poignantly real.

309 pp. - Biography

Wild Thing: A Life of Paul Gauguin
Sue Prideaux

An original and revealing portrait of the misunderstood French Post-Impressionist artist.

Shortlisted for the 2024 Baillie Gifford Prize

401 pp. - Biography

William Blake and the Sea Monsters of Love: Art, Poetry, and the Imagining of a New World
Philip Hoare

A revelatory and joyous exploration of how one visionary inspired two-hundred years of art, poetry and protest by the acclaimed author of Albert and the Whale

453 pp. - Nonfiction

With a Vengeance
Riley Sager

One train. No stops. A deadly game of survival and revenge.

Instant New York Times Bestseller 

382 pp. - Fiction

The Woman in Suite 11
Ruth Ware

In this follow-up to #1 New York Times bestselling author Ruth Ware’s multi-million copy mega-hit The Woman in Cabin 10, Lo Blacklock returns to attend the opening of a luxury hotel, only to find herself in a white-knuckled race across Europe.

387 pp. - Fiction

Wonder City: How to Reclaim Human-Scale Urban Life
Lynn Ellsworth

This book is an essential read for urban planners, policymakers, and anyone interested in the future of urban living. Ellsworth’s clear, accessible insights into complex issues make Wonder City a vital contribution to the discourse on urban development, appealing to a broad audience that cares about the dynamics and future of city life.

374 pp. - Nonfiction

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