More new books to help stave off the winter blues.
In the 1980’s, teams of American and French scientists raced feverishly to isolate the AIDS virus.
The 19th century saw the emergence of
the field of paleontology. Othniel Marsh and Edward Cope were fierce
competitors, each trying to discover more dinosaur fossils and publish more
research than the other.
The journey back / Priscilla Cummings
Digger escapes a juvenile
detention center, determined to return home and protect his mother and younger
siblings from his abusive father. An injury hinders his progress, forcing him
to hide in a campground. The friends and work he finds there help him come to
terms with his past and discover the grace of second chances. (from Amazon.com)
The secret prophecy / Herbie Brennan
Edward Michael “Em” Goverton’s father is dead. Armed men attend the
funeral. Then they begin following Em. Then Em discovers his father’s secret—“the
key to a five-hundred-year-old deadly prediction by the prophet
Nostradamus—[and] personal tragedy morphs into international crisis.” (from
Amazon.com)
The miner's daughter / Gretchen Laskas
Sixteen
year old Willa is a coal miner’s daughter. Her family is acquainted with hard
work, worn clothes, black dust, and poverty. But Willa enjoys reading and is a
talented writer. Can Eleanor Roosevelt’s initiatives provide opportunities for
work, education, and security? (from Amazon.com)
Saving Grace / Katherine Spencer
When Grace’s brother died in a car crash the
summer before her junior year of high school, life was divided into before and after Matt died. And in the after,
Grace feels that everything in her life is pointless. “Enter Philomena, an odd new girl at school, to save the day: a
self-proclaimed sort of guardian angel sent to help Grace pull it together and
restore her faith.” (From Amazon.com)
Me, dead dad, and Alcatraz / Chris Lynch
“[Uncle] Alex broke me.”
“For goodness’ sake, you worked out at a gym.”
“For goodness’ sake, you worked out at a gym.”
Elvin Bishop thought all of his father’s
family was deceased. That is what his mother told him, and he had assumed she
was a reliable source. But one day his uncle Alex arrived, and with tuba music,
spicy food, and vigorous exercise, attempted to make a man out of Elvin. (from the book jacket)
Time bomb / Nigel Hinton
"I’ve never told this story to anyone because when I was twelve
I swore an oath in blood that I would never tell it. But the friends I swore
it with are dead now, so it’s time to break that oath and tell the truth…”
In the summer of ’49, four friends discover an unexploded bomb and swear to tell no one. It is a “sin of omission that has the gravest consequences.” (from the book jacket)
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