What To Do About the Solomons is an absorbing debut novel that is resonant with familial dramas, grudges, and love. This literary debut introduces the Solomons in a sprawling, complex family drama that is awash with secrets and and... Read More
"Just Immigration" is an informative, thought-provoking read that sparks discussion on a pressing humanitarian issue. Political-science professor Mark R. Amstutz comprehensively addresses one of the most contentious political issues of... Read More
In this of-the-moment spiritual guide, the lesson is this: stay true to yourself, and the answers will follow. From its bright cover to the eighteen handwritten #Truthbombs in its pages, Danielle LaPorte’s new book, "White Hot Truth",... Read More
"Hollow" is a work with an animate, vibrant, and awe-inducing core, in which untroubled faith is revealed to be a frequent foil. While Owen Egerton’s "Hollow" begins with a creed—ex-professor Oliver’s declaration that he believes... Read More
"The Mountain Goddess" is an engaging, vivid work of impressive scope, with elements from fantasy, Buddhism, and Indian culture. Shelley Schanfield’s "The Mountain Goddess" presents a fantasy version of ancient India that chronicles a... Read More
Juan Martin Guevara wants Che to be remembered as a human being, not as a myth. Fifty years after his death, Ernesto “Che” Guevara remains one of the most charismatic and controversial figures of the Cold War era. In this memoir, his... Read More
Ideal for true-crime fans, historians, and library collections, this is a comprehensive picture of Prohibition-era crime. John Binder’s Al Capone’s Beer Wars covers much more than the Capone criminal beat for its intricate history of... Read More
Grisly details and uncommon perspectives make this a psychologically captivating mystery, if not one for the squeamish. Charlie Donlea’s "The Girl Who Was Taken" is a uniquely premised, pulse-pounding, psychological thriller about... Read More