Ralph S. Mouse looks out of his mouse-hole in the Mountain View Inn and spies a little red motorcycle that’s just his size.
Ralph S. Mouse looks out of his mouse-hole in the Mountain View Inn and spies a little red motorcycle that’s just his size.
Ralph S. Mouse looks out of his mouse-hole in the Mountain View Inn and spies a little red motorcycle that’s just his size.
THE INNOCENTS reminds us of all the reasons we read—to understand, to imagine, to find compassion and to witness the making of art.
Walker’s haunting dystopian novel is full of provocative questions but light on the violence often present in the genre
Scharer makes an impressive debut with this bold historical novel.
This smart, briskly paced novel explores issues of gender and relationships.
A dying woman’s recollections give glimpses of life in a country where personal, political and moral values are heavily dictated by religion and men.
It’s tempting to describe FIND ME as a pleasant, post-summer diversion, but it’s deeper than that.
Like a great meal, THE CHEFFE leaves us pleasantly sated but still wanting more.
Beth Piatote strings together stories like the intricate strands of a handmade necklace.
ON SWIFT HORSES offers many painful reminders of the damage that repression can do, but it’s also a deep-breathing, atmospheric novel.
Kids are unpredictable. They suddenly love food they once thought disgusting. And sometimes they just might spontaneously combust.
With endless British wit, Stephen Fry puts his own spin on classical Greek mythology.
With hand-drawn illustrations that match the magnificence of their subject matter, Great Goddesses is a provocative tribute to the power of female agency.
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