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Libby Fischer Hellmann

An Eye for Murder

Ellie Foreman Mysteries

Amelia Gray

Museum of the Weird

<p>Winner of FC2’s American Book Review/Ronald Sukenick Innovative Fiction Prize.</p><p>A monogrammed cube appears in your town. Your landlord cheats you out of first place in the annual Christmas decorating contest. You need to learn how to love and care for your mate — a paring knife. These situations and more reveal the wondrous play and surreal humor that make up the stories in Amelia Gray’s stunning collection of stories: </p><p>Acerbic wit and luminous prose mark these shorts, while sickness and death lurk amidst the humor. Characters find their footing in these bizarre scenarios and manage to fall into redemption and rebirth. invites you into its hallways, then beguiles, bewitches, and reveals a writer who has discovered a manner of storytelling all her own.</p><

Libby Fischer Hellmann

An Image of Death

Libby Fischer Hellmann

Nice Girl Does Noir -- Vol. 2 (Intro by J.A.Konrath)

Amelia Gray

Threats

<p>David’s wife is dead. At least, he thinks she’s dead. But he can’t figure out what killed her or why she had to die, and his efforts to sort out what’s happened have been interrupted by his discovery of a series of elaborate and escalating threats hidden in strange places around his home — one buried in the sugar bag, another carved into the side of his television. These disturbing threats may be the best clues to his wife’s death:</p><p>CURL UP ON MY LAP. LET ME BRUSH YOUR HAIR WITH MY FINGERS. I AM SINGING YOU A LULLABY. I AM TESTING FOR STRUCTURAL WEAKNESS IN YOUR SKULL.</p><p>Detective Chico is also on the case, and is intent on asking David questions he doesn’t know the answers to and introducing him to people who don’t appear to have David’s or his wife’s best interests in mind. With no one to trust, David is forced to rely on his own memories and faculties — but they too are proving unreliable.</p><p>In , Amelia Gray builds a world that is bizarre yet familiar, violent yet tender. It is an electrifying story of love and loss that grabs you on the first page and never loosens its grip.</p><

Libby Fischer Hellmann

Doubleback

Mary Gaitskill

Two Girls, Fat and Thin

This captivating novel shimmers with dark intensity and wicked wit. In a stunning synthesis of eroticism, rage, pathos, and humor, Gaitskill's "fine storyteller's pace and brilliant metaphors" ( Review) create a haunting and unforgettable journey into the dark side of contemporary life and the deepest recesses of the soul.<

William Gibson

The Peripheral

Libby Fischer Hellmann

Set the Night on Fire

Mary Gaitskill

Don't Cry

<p>Following the extraordinary success of her novel , Mary Gaitskill returns with a luminous new collection of stories-her first in more than ten years. In “College Town 1980,” young people adrift in Ann Arbor debate the meaning of personal strength at the start of the Reagan era; in the urban fairy tale “Mirrorball,” a young man steals a girl’s soul during a one-night stand; in “The Little Boy,” a woman haunted by the death of her former husband is finally able to grieve through a mysterious encounter with a needy child; and in “The Arms and Legs of the Lake,” the fallout of the Iraq war becomes disturbingly real for the disparate passengers on a train going up the Hudson-three veterans, a liberal editor, a soldier’s uncle, and honeymooners on their way to Niagara Falls.</p><p>Each story delivers the powerful, original language, and the dramatic engagement of the intelligent mind with the craving body-or of the intelligent body with the craving mind-that is characteristic of Gaitskill’s fiction. As intense as her first collection of stories, reflects the profound enrichment of life experience. As the stories unfold against the backdrop of American life over the last thirty years, they describe how our social conscience has evolved while basic human truths-“the crude cinder blocks of male and female down in the basement, holding up the house,” as one character puts it-remain unchanged.</p><

Libby Fischer Hellmann

Nice Girl Does Noir -- Vol. 1 (Intro by William Kent Krueger)

Mary Gaitskill

Veronica

Alison and Veronica meet amid the nocturnal glamour of 1980s New York: One is a young model stumbling away from the wreck of her career, the other an eccentric middle-aged office temp. Over the next twenty years their friendship will encompass narcissism and tenderness, exploitation and self-sacrifice, love and mortality. Moving seamlessly from present and past, casting a fierce yet compassionate eye on two eras and their fixations, the result is a work of timeless depth and moral power.<

Kay Hooper

Captain's Paradise

Mary Gaitskill

Because They Wanted To: Stories

A man tells a story to a woman sitting beside him on a plane, little suspecting what it reveals about his capacity for cruelty and contempt. A callow runaway girl is stranded in a strange city with another woman&#8217;s fractiously needy children. An uncomprehending father helplessly lashes out at the daughter he both loves and resents. In these raw, startling, and incandescently lovely stories, the author of yields twelve indelible portraits of people struggling with the disparity between what they want and what they know. is further evidence that Gaitskill is one of the fiercest, funniest, and most subversively compassionate writers at work today.<

Kay Hooper

Golden Threads

Robert Galbraith

The Silkworm

Cormoran Strike

Kay Hooper

Out of the Shadows

Kerry Greenwood

Tamam Shud

In 1948 a man was found dead on an Adelaide beach. Well-dressed and unmarked, he had a half-smoked cigarette by his side, but no identity documents. Six decades on we don't know who he was, how he got there or how he died. Somerton Man remains one of Australia's most mysterious cold cases.<

Kay Hooper

Raven on the Wing

Marcos Giralt-Torrente

Father and Son: A Lifetime

"This is a story about two people, but I’m the only one telling it."Many authors have wrestled with the death of a father in their writing, but few have grappled with the subject as fiercely, or as powerfully, as the brilliant Spanish writer Marcos Giralt Torrente does in , the mesmerizing and discomfiting memoir that won him Spain’s highest literary award, the Spanish National Book Award. Giralt Torrente is best known for his fiction, but it is in this often savage memoir that he demonstrates the full measure of his gifts.In the months following his father’s death from cancer, Giralt Torrente could not write — until he began to write about his father. In many ways, they were strangers to each other; after his parents’ relationship ended, when he was quite young, Giralt Torrente’s father remained in contact with him but held himself at a distance. Silences began to linger, prompted by Giralt Torrente’s anger at his father’s lies and absences and perpetuated by their inability to speak about the sources of the conflicts between them. But despite their differences, they had a strong bond, and in the months leading up to his father’s death from cancer, they groped toward reconciliation. Here the author commits to exploring it all, sparing neither his father nor himself, conscious of their flaws but also understanding of them. Weaving together history and personal narrative, Giralt Torrente crafts a startlingly honest account of a complex relationship, and an indelible portrait of both father and son.Beautifully translated by Natasha Wimmer, the award-winning translator of Roberto Bolaño, and as lyrical and clear-eyed on mourning as Joan Didion’s is an uncommonly gripping memoir by an uncommonly talented writer.<

Kay Hooper

Star-Crossed Lovers

Kay Hooper

Summer of the Unicorn

Yannick Grannec

The Goddess of Small Victories

<p>Princeton University 1980. Kurt Gödel, the most fascinating, though hermetic, mathematician of the twentieth century, has just died of anorexia. His widow, Adele, a fierce woman shunned by her husband’s colleagues because she had been a cabaret dancer, is now consigned to a nursing home. To the great annoyance of the Institute of Advanced Studies, she refuses to hand over Gödel’s precious records. Anna Roth, the timid daughter of two mathematicians who are part of the Princeton clique, is given the difficult task of befriending Adele and retrieving the documents from her. As Adele begins to notice Anna’s own estrangement from her milieu and starts to trust her, she opens the gates of her memory and together they travel back to Vienna during the Nazi era, Princeton right after the war, the pressures of McCarthyism, the end of the positivist ideal, and the advent of nuclear weapons. It is this epic story of a genius who could never quite find his place in the world, and the determination of the woman who loved him, that will eventually give Anna the courage to change her own life.</p><

Kay Hooper

The Glass Shoe

Don Gutteridge

Turncoat

Marc Edwards

Kay Hooper

Through the Looking Glass

Don Gutteridge

Vital Secrets

Marc Edwards

Kay Hooper

Time After Time

Don Gutteridge

Death of a Patriot

Marc Edwards

Kay Hooper

What Dreams May Come

Don Gutteridge

Bloody Relations

Marc Edwards

Linda Howard

Burn

Susanna Gregory

The Butcher Of Smithfield

Thomas Chaloner

Final Jeopardy-V11 Html-

Fairstein, Linda - Final Jeopardy

Susanna Gregory

The Westminster Poisoner

Thomas Chaloner

Tursten- Helen

Detective Inspector Huss: A Huss Investigation set in Sweden, Vol. 1

Christopher Golden

Sons of Anarchy: Bratva

<p>Set after the fourth season of the groundbreaking television drama , from the mind of Executive Producer Kurt Sutter…</p><p>With half of the club recently released from Stockton State Penitentiary, and the Galindo drug cartel bringing down heat at every turn, the MC already has its hands full. Yet Jax Teller the V.P. of SAMCRO has another problem to deal with. He just learned that his Irish half-sister Trinity has been in the U.S. for months entangled with Russian BRATVA gangsters. Now that she’s abruptly gone missing, he’s sure the brewing mafia war is connected to her disappearance. Jax heads to Nevada with Chibs and Opie to search for her and seek revenge. Trinity may be half-Irish, but she’s also half-Teller and where Teller’s go, trouble follows.</p><

Georgette Heyer

A Blunt Instrument

Mira Grant

Symbiont

Parasitology

<p>THE SECOND BOOK IN MIRA GRANT’S TERRIFYING PARASITOLOGY SERIES.</p><p>THE ENEMY IS INSIDE US.</p><p>The SymboGen designed tapeworms were created to relieve humanity of disease and sickness. But the implants in the majority of the world’s population began attacking their hosts turning them into a ravenous horde.</p><p>Now those who do not appear to be afflicted are being gathered for quarantine as panic spreads, but Sal and her companions must discover how the tapeworms are taking over their hosts, what their eventual goal is, and how they can be stopped.</p><

Jack Higgins

a Darker Place (2009)

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