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New Science Fiction and Fantasy Books | May 18

Set off on an adventure to new worlds this week! This selection of new science fiction and fantasy books will surely please! Science Fiction fans should be excited about the latest from bestselling authors Una McCormack, Felix R. Savage, Kelsey Josund, and more. If Fantasy is what your library needs, you’ll be able to pick up the latest from J.E. Mueller, Susan Stradiotto, Jess Mountfield, and more. Enjoy your new science fiction and fantasy books. Happy reading!


Fantasy


Science Fiction


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New Young Adult Books to Read | May 18

Are you an avid reader of Young Adult books? This week you are in luck! With all of these new novels, you’re bound to find a new favorite book to add to your reading list. This week includes new novels from bestselling authors Maggie Stiefvater, Emiko Jean, Jennifer Dugan, and many more. Enjoy your new young adult books. Happy reading!



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New Biography and Memoir Books to Read | May 18

Looking for some new biography and memoir books for your library? There are so many new releases this week that you’re bound to find a new favorite. You can pick up new books from Todd Morrison, John Green, Sarah Schulman, and many more. Enjoy your new biography and memoir books. Happy reading!



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The $0.99 Spring eBook Sale

Over 50 Books. $0.99 each.

Score amazing deals on these fantastic titles and support female authors this Spring.

The Spring eBook Sale is Brought To You by She Writes Press and SparkPress. This sale ends on Monday, May 24th, 2021.


Fiction


Historical Fiction


Young Adult / Children


Fantasy / Science Fiction


Non-Fiction / Memoir


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New Literary Fiction Novels For Your Spring Reading List | 2021

New Literary Fiction Novels For Your Spring Reading List | 2021

Need some literary fiction book recommendations for your spring reading list? You've come to the right place, as we've created a new list of some of our favorite new releases by Ruth Torjussen, Jennifer Weiner, Maggie Shipstead, Catherine Ryan Hyde, Gian Sardar, and Erika Montgomery. Enjoy your new books!



Friends and Neighbors

by Ruth Torjussen

Release Date: January 30, 2021

Life as a Marie Osmond impersonator living in Stoke can be challenging enough. But when your best friend has died and your other friends have moved away it can suddenly get a whole lot tougher. Now heartbroken Jenny has a female-shaped hole in her life which - despite the presence of many women - won’t go away. Grief has turned her into a first-class snob. Husband Lonny preps the house for climate change and is unable to halt Jenny’s unraveling. Then gorgeous Trudi wafts into the creative writing class and brings some much-needed hope.

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That Summer

by Jennifer Weiner

Release Date: May 11, 2021

Daisy Shoemaker can’t sleep. With a thriving cooking business, full schedule of volunteer work, and a beautiful home in the Philadelphia suburbs, she should be content. But her teenage daughter can be a handful, her husband can be distant, her work can feel trivial, and she has lots of acquaintances, but no real friends. Still, Daisy knows she’s got it good. So why is she up all night?

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Great Circle

by Maggie Shipstead

Release Date: May 4, 2021

After being rescued as infants from a sinking ocean liner in 1914, Marian and Jamie Graves are raised by their dissolute uncle in Missoula, Montana. There--after encountering a pair of barnstorming pilots passing through town in beat-up biplanes--Marian commences her lifelong love affair with flight. At fourteen she drops out of school and finds an unexpected and dangerous patron in a wealthy bootlegger who provides a plane and subsidizes her lessons, an arrangement that will haunt her for the rest of her life, even as it allows her to fulfill her destiny: circumnavigating the globe by flying over the North and South Poles.

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Seven Perfect Things

by Catherine Ryan Hyde

Release Date: May 4, 2021

Thirteen-year-old Abby Hubble lives in an unhappy home in the Sierra Nevada foothills where her father makes life miserable for her and her mother, Mary. One day Abby witnesses a man dump a litter of puppies into the nearby river. Diving in to rescue all seven, she knows she won’t be able to bring them home. Afraid for their fate at the pound, she takes them to an abandoned cabin, where all she can offer is a promise that she’ll be back the next day.

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Take What You Can Carry

by Gian Sardar

Release Date: May 1, 2021

It’s 1979. Olivia Murray, a secretary at a Los Angeles newspaper, is determined to become a photojournalist and make a difference with her work. When opportunity arrives, she seizes it, accompanying her Kurdish boyfriend, Delan, to northern Iraq for a family wedding, hoping to capture an image that lands her a job in the photo department.

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A Summer to Remember

by Erika Montgomery

Release Date: May 11, 2021

For thirty-year-old Frankie Simon, selling movie memorabilia in the shop she opened with her late mother on Hollywood Boulevard is more than just her livelihood—it’s an enduring connection to the only family she has ever known. But when a mysterious package arrives containing a photograph of her mother and famous movie stars Glory Cartwright and her husband at a coastal film festival the year before Frankie’s birth, her life begins to unravel in ways unimaginable.

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The Story Behind Cora: Rise of the Fallen Goddess by A.L. Hawke

By A.L. Hawke

So why am I debuting a mythical fantasy and what’s this all about? I’ve published a paranormal romance trilogy, a science fiction series, and an urban fantasy. Why mythical fantasy?

The launch of this novel meant a lot to me personally. It’s the culmination of years of dreaming, and the subject of two creations I love: Azure Blue and Cora.

Many years ago, I wrote five unpublished books in a setting called Azure Blue. Originally inspired by Enya, my muse thought up an ancient blue world with a green sun in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea. Music, even lyric-less, is always ripe for adding imagery and weaving a story. This was particularly true with the ethereal music of Enya. Enya inspired me to create a dreamscape full of amazon nymphs, Greek gods & goddesses, and flying unicorns—a land literally blue, like the backdrop in the cover. And I enjoyed escaping into Azure Blue and the labyrinths below. Describing what lies above and beneath my fantasy world was a blast to visit and a challenge to write. So when I recently embarked on Cora: Rise of the Fallen Goddess, I dusted off all of this worldbuilding.

But a book is more than a setting. Two hundred pages into “pantsing” one of my original Azure Blue manuscripts, Cora was born. By the way, I don’t outline, which I’d never recommend to budding writers out there unless you’re like me, willing to exchange fun and the unexpected for heavy editing and re-writes. Anyway, I “pantse” and my characters appear. Many come and go, but the goddess Persephone, my Cora, was unforgettable. She’s a sneaky goddess; hard, arrogant, and, yet, vulnerable. She made for a super fun heroine in my contemporary urban fantasy, CORA (yes, she’s the same character in both books), but in this novel, taking place four thousand years before, I got to delve into a young Cora and look into the origin of how a dark goddess developed any heart at all.

In Cora: Rise of the Fallen Goddess, Cora is sent away to Azure Blue by her mother, Demeter, to live with the Amazon nymphs under Queen Nephrea (better known as Nefertiti in Ancient Egyptian). There she’s taught the Amazon code of honor, bravery, and righteousness. But Cora is not an Amazon nymph. And prophecy holds quite a different fate for the goddess as she grows into adulthood—Hades, Lord of the Underworld.

Upon Cora’s fall, Demeter rages and threatens to freeze the entire world under ice and snow forever. Her foster mother, Nephrea, must offer a sacrifice to quell Demeter’s rage.

This is classic epic fantasy with maps, swords, battle scenes and the whole lot, but it’s also a strongly character-driven coming of age story. It’s about Cora growing up. It’s a book about the shackles of life and the hope we hold in freeing them through love. And released just in time for mother’s day, it’s a story about a mother and daughter’s love. I invite you to take a journey with Cora and her mother.

A.L. Hawke is the author of the new book Cora: Rise of the Fallen Goddess.

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Author Website

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Interview with Mark O'Dell, Author of The Shade of Highfall

What can you tell us about your new release, The Shade of Highfall?

I started thinking about the Shade of Highfall in 2009, although I didn’t call it that back then. The tale of a struggling young woman named Shrew, from the slums of the ancient city of Highfall, who discovered help from a spirit trapped in a dagger, had been bouncing around in my head for some time before I started writing it down.

As I started writing, other characters became woven into her story. It started with Cyrus Col, a high priest with ambitions to bring ruin to the world by releasing an ancient evil known as the Master of Shades. Then two others followed. Vaskah Shen, a high-ranking nobleman from a distant country that had designs on conquering Highfall and a holy knight called Aelmar, who commanded the King of Highfall’s armies.

As the Shade of Highfall reaches its climax, all four characters collide in an emotional rollercoaster of betrayal, horror and revenge. Yet above all this, the story becomes a race against time, to prevent the return of the Master of Shades and the global destruction that would surely follow.

My aim was to create an entirely new world and make it highly immersive. So I also created maps and a glossary to help drag my readers into the middle of the action. I can promise that the sequel will be out of this world.

What or who inspired you to become an author?

I was inspired by the works of other authors of fantasy and science fiction. For a long time I read their stories and then one day, decided to write a story of my own.

What's on your top 5 list for the best books you've ever read?

Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien

The Time Patrol by Poul Anderson

A Princess of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs

Lyonesse by Jack Vance

The Technicolor Time Machine by Harry Harrison

Say you're the host of a literary talk show. Who would be your first guest? What would you want to ask?

This is a difficult question, because my preferred guest has been deceased for a while. But, if I could go back in time, my first guest would be Edgar Rice Burroughs. He started writing to feed his family and the many worlds and characters he created are absolutely amazing. I would ask him - where did you get the idea of Tarzan from?

What's your favorite thing about writing?

It puts me in a different place, away from the daily humdrum of life. I have a vivid imagination and I often play out scenes from my books in my head.

What is a typical day like for you?

I get up and usually go swimming. Then I’m off to work. I work for a science and engineering company in the UK and one of my jobs is writing about emerging technologies. They’re going to find themselves in one of my books one day!

What scene from The Shade of Highfall was your favorite to write?

The scene where she confronted two rogues waiting in ambush on a forest road and finally admitted she was the notorious ‘Shade of Highfall’. You’ll have to read the book to find out what happened next!

A ‘Shade’, by the way, is a wraith or disembodied soul that haunts the shadows.

Do you have a motto, quote, or philosophy you live by?

Not really, but if I was forced to pick one, it would be two words I picked them up when I was a navigator flying in military aircraft. It is: “Never assume”.

Mark O'Dell is the author of the new book The Shade of Highfall.

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Interview with Ruth Torjussen, Author of Friends and Neighbours

What can you tell us about your new release, Friends and Neighbours?

‘Friends and Neighbours’ is my first novel although I came up with the idea and wrote it as a film script in 2007. It’s been a long road! I had to totally fail at film-making first before I would consider the possibility of being able to write a novel. The story is a humorous one about a middle-aged woman who after the death of her best friend, is left bereft of female companionship. However, her grief is making her more like her mother, a first-class snob. There are plenty of women around her but all she can see are their faults. This is the main storyline however there are many subplots and lots of local characters including the main character Jenny’s husband Lonny, who seems to be everyone’s favourite judging by the reviews. Although there is a lot of comedy in this book there is also a lot of grit and many serious issues, which weren’t really planned, I suppose they are part of my life and just came out in the writing. Certainly Lonny’s passion for the environment is mine and my work as a carer obviously informed all the scenes with Jenny in that role.

What or who inspired you to become an author?

My sister Mary is a published author who writes in the thriller genre, so I had an insider’s view of what it takes to write a novel. I had always considered myself a writer though because of my work writing film scripts, I think my first rejection letter (from the BBC) was in 1995! But writing scripts is frustrating because they are only the blueprint for the film, I guessed that writing novels would be more satisfying - especially now that we can self-publish - and that is absolutely the case, it’s fantastic! I suppose the real inspiration came from doing a ‘How to’ course online (sorry I’ve forgotten which one) and realising that in writing a novel, great use can be made of writing the thoughts inside a character’s head, their POV. I took to this like a duck to water, I really love it.

What's on your top 5 list for the best books you've ever read?

This is tricky because if you asked me next week it might be a different answer! And in general I read a lot more non-fiction than fiction. I’ve just read Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell which I adored, otherwise maybe, ‘The Crow Road’ by Iain Banks, ‘The Book of Night Women’ by Marlon James, ‘Wuthering Heights’ by Emily Bronte and ‘To kill a mockingbird’ by Harper Lee.

Say you're the host of a literary talk show. Who would be your first guest? What would you want to ask?

I would invite Maggie O’Farrell and ask her about Agnes, what research she did and how she decided that she should have this witchy, herbalist side of her. I am extremely interested in women as healers, a role that was taken away from us when the witchhunts began. This theme overlaps with another book I have just completed ‘Return to Harlech’.

What's your favorite thing about writing?

I find the first draft pretty agonising, the closest thing to being in labour that I’ve ever experienced! However, every draft after that gets increasingly more enjoyable. I would say it is being able to write someone’s POV, I love it.

What is a typical day like for you?

I try to write each morning and focus on my care work in the afternoon but it doesn’t always turn out like that. I care for and live with three people with learning disabilities and/or mental health challenges so there is always something going on. I also have gardening and cooking as big interests plus books and webinars about Climate Change and what we can do. I love to learn about how we can make a difference.

What scene from Friends and Neighbours was your favorite to write?

The dinner party with Jackie and Miranda, even though it’s excruciating sometimes, it made me laugh and laugh. I’m not sure readers feel the same though as it’s not normally mentioned in reviews. The characters are only in that one scene but I loved them so much that they are coming back for bigger roles in book 2.

Do you have a motto, quote, or philosophy you live by?

‘Walk a mile in my shoes

Just walk a mile in my shoes

Before you abuse, criticize, and accuse

Then walk a mile in my shoes’

(as sung by Elvis 🙂 )

Ruth Torjussen is the author of the new book Friends and Neighbours

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Interview with Rachel Hauck, Author of To Save a King

What can you tell us about your new release, To Save a King?

This is the second in the True Blue Royal series but also works as a stand alone. Crown Prince John's happily ever after ended in grief. Gemma Stone's ended in shame. But a new happily ever after is just beginning.

What books are currently on your nightstand?

The Queen's Secret by Karen Harper and Let It Be Me by Becky Wade.

What advice would you give your teenage self?

Save more money!

If you had an extra hour each day, how would you spend it?

Wow, that's a tough one. I'd spend it reading or sleeping. Or, learning to cook.

What makes your world go round? Why does it bring you joy?

It takes several things to make my world go round. My life with my husband, family and friends, and with my church family. Relationships bring me joy because of the people. I love sharing the journey with them.

What scene from To Save a King was your favorite to write?

There's a scene where Gemma, the heroine, learns the investment she's made in her home was a scam. The news is traumatic for her. I loved all the nuances of that scene: how she got the news, how she reacted. I also loved the sequel scene.

Rachel Hauck is the author of the new book To Save a King.

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Interview with Ellie Beals, Author of Emergence

What can you tell us about your new release, Emergence?

Emergence is a novel of psychological suspense, that many readers report kept them reading long into the night. Great – that’s what these kinds of books are supposed to do. But you may encounter some genre-bending surprises along the way, beyond those woven into the plot. Like women strong enough to take care of themselves without angsting about their pasts, like dogs that are essential players in the story and who behave the way real dogs do, like intricate and unusual relationships, and like moral quandaries that may keep you mulling for quite a while and wanting someone to discuss them with. That’s what I worked to craft for my readers, and what many of them report they’ve experienced: a compelling read that transports them into the wilds of West Quebec, and a lasting and powerful memory of Lac Rouge and the wildchild Xavier they met there, in this dark, but occasionally sun-speckled drama.

What or who inspired you to become an author?

I spent my professional life as a writer, since as a consultant who entered the field as a plain language specialist, writing was the thread that consistently wove through the varied fields (corrections, social justice, dispute resolution, and many more) in which I conducted projects. Thus, I knew that in some way, I was fulfilling my lifetime ambition to be a writer. But it was from my perspective, a VERY small way, since when I first formed that ambition as a child enthralled with reading, I was thinking about writing fiction. About being An Author. When I retired from consulting it was finally time to have that showdown with myself to see if I could move from being a writer to becoming an author.

What's on your top 5 list for the best books you've ever read?

Tough question.  The list would probably be different on any day you asked.  But for today,  here you go:

  • Lord of the Flies
  • Catcher in the Rye
  • Salem’s Lot
  • To Kill a Mockingbird
  • Deliverance

When I look at my list, I note that with the exception of Deliverance, children or adolescents are the main characters in each of these great books.  Pretty strange, since I never had or wanted to have children.  But I always recognized the great skill required to create a convincing child character. Given these influences, it is not surprising that Xavier, the wildchild of Lac Rouge and the principal protagonist of Emergence, is an adolescent.  Lord of the Flies and Deliverance were also important influences in shaping the wilderness dramas at the heart of Emergence.

Say you're the host of a literary talk show. Who would be your first guest? What would you want to ask?

My first guest would be James Lee Burke, author of countless novels set in Louisiana, featuring Dave Robicheaux, and a more limited series about Hacklebury Holland, set in Texas. The Robicheaux series is my favorite, because of the extraordinary descriptions of Louisiana -- a place I’ve never visited, but feel that I know intimately through Burke.

Burke is in his 80s now, but in his most recent book, A Private Cathedral, he displays, perhaps more than ever, the qualities that have fascinated me since I first “met“ him. I am awed that a writer can project such maleness in his writing - I can smell the testosterone wafting off the page. That carries with it descriptions of what happens to people prone to violence – the way they are seized by anger like a palpable force that transports them to a physical place to which I’ve never been, and to which I hope to never go. Having said that, I have never felt that Burke celebrates this kind of violence, as film-makers like Quentin Tarintino or Sam Peckinpah before him, have. He seems to view it as an elemental force - one that Robicheaux valiantly attempts but sometimes fails to fight successfully.

But all of this is simply my speculation on Burke’s perspective on the violence he presents. I’d love to ask him about it. Does he or did he experience this drive to violence? How has he coped with it? How does he reconcile that with the extraordinarily empathetic perspective that also permeates all of his books?

What's your favorite thing about writing?

I am and have always been time-sensitive. I take my watch off only to shower. But I hardly need it – my internal clock is uncanny. Regardless of what time I set an alarm for, I awaken five minutes before that. My ability to know what time it is without looking at my watch is legendary. There are many obvious benefits to this, but also the significant downside of constantly having Time as a looming presence in my life. The thing I love most about writing is that it makes time go away, or at the very least, slooowww waaay doowwwn into a more elastic and forgiving medium than I’ve cast it to be in every other aspect of my life. When I am writing (fiction – not a consulting report!) I am fully immersed, lost to everything but that evolving interior world. I love this intense and very narrow focus, and the way it eliminates the many nagging little voices constantly threading their way through everyday consciousness.

What is a typical day like for you?

Since I stopped consulting, and Covid shut down my coaching (for dog-obedience competitors) practice, I no longer have a settled routine. But even though there is no set sequence of events, almost every day includes, in addition to the standard eating, sleeping, relating to family and friends, and chilling, these activities: writing (marketing-related, correspondence, bloggery, or fiction); exercise (hiking, skiing, kayaking, swimming at the cabin, or cardio-training and weight-lifting in Ottawa); dog care (training, health care, feeding, grooming).

What scene from Emergence was your favorite to write?

Let’s make this plural - “scenes”, rather than scene. There are a number of violent, action scenes in Emergence. I was both excited and apprehensive as I approached these, because I had never written anything like that before ( murder and mayhem being either not-present or extremely muted in the consulting world). So I didn’t know if I’d be up to it. I found writing these scenes to be completely engrossing. My background in dog-training, where high-calibre competitors need to map out every move in order to choreograph a performance was very helpful, and the whole process of crafting these scenes was great fun. And they worked. Sometimes when you write – you know you nailed it. I felt that about these scenes and readers have confirmed it.

Do you have a motto, quote, or philosophy you live by?

My guiding light these days, is to never revert to the motto that drove me throughout the whole of my professional career: “Shit fast – the bear is coming.” That sense of hovering immediacy, of having to get it done NOW was tremendously useful in consulting, and allowed me in a thirty-year career, to never once miss a deadline. It developed (indeed, super-sized) my natural drive. But it is not an approach compatible with chilling and being in the moment. At this point in my life, those qualities are the ones I find more rewarding than the constant driving and striving. The wilds of West Quebec, which I know and love, and is the locale of Emergence, have helped me quell the more drivey (a term we use a lot in the dog-world, but which applies to humans also), ambitious parts of who I am.

Ellie Beals is the author of the new book Emergence

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