Coming-of-age and coming out collide in Felice Cohen’s poignant memoir "Half In". When Cohen was a twenty-three-year-old recent college graduate, she faced her future with uncertainty. She hoped to become a full-time professional... Read More
Two young women develop a friendship and more while navigating work, magic, and love in "Doughnuts and Doom". Margot—a witch whose familiar is Stanley, a lovable snake—is forced to sell potions for a living because she can’t manage... Read More
Tessa Brunton shares her experiences living with myalgic encephalomyelitis, also known as chronic fatigue syndrome, in her graphic memoir "Notes from a Sickbed". Myalgic encephalomyelitis is a little-understood disease that produces... Read More
In "Merchants Bridge", an attorney’s life crumbles after a violent attack leaves him unable to discern reality from his hallucinations. While celebrating a successful meeting with a client, Gray and his law partner and close friend,... Read More
"The Ruby Rule" is an optimistic self-help guide that accepts the inevitability of opposing viewpoints and encourages lively, civil dialogues with others. Arthur F. Coombs III’s "The Ruby Rule" advocates for empathy, tolerance, and... Read More
"For the Hurt of My People" is a passionate, thoughtful political science text that argues for bringing publicly funded health care to the US. Joseph Q. Jarvis’s political science book "For the Hurt of My People" suggests means of... Read More
An image of billowy towers of stars-in-formation opens this wonder-inducing science text that introduces youngsters to some awesome features of space. The book pairs science terms with compelling factoids, as about the ongoing search for... Read More
In Nancy Nau Sullivan’s cozy mystery novel "Mission Improbable: Vietnam", two women in search of their families’ stories forge a sisterhood—and consider the human impacts of wars. Jean’s mother was Vietnamese, but Jean doesn’t... Read More