Friday, June 30, 2017

Lynn's List (June 30, 2017)

Each Friday I publish a list of titles I have come across, during the past week, that I find interesting. Happy reading!

My Fourth of July read this year is 1776 by David McCullough.

  • Medea's Curse by Anne Buist
  • Dangerous to Know: Shocking. Page-Turning. Crime Thriller with Forensic Psychiatrist Natalie King by Anne Buist
  • Among the Departed by Vicki Delany
  • Dare to Remember by Susanna Beard
  • The Teacher's Secret by Suzanne Leal
  • Faithful: A Novel by Alice Hoffman
  • Almost Dead by Lisa Jackson
  • Words in Deep Blue by Cath Crowley
  • Marching to Valhalla: A Novel of Custer's Last Days by Michael Blake
  • The Water and the Blood by Nancy E. Turner
  • No Darker Place (Shades of Death #1) by Debra Webb
  • California’s Deadliest Earthquakes: A History by Abraham Hoffman
  • Jane Addams Pioneer of Social Justice by Cornelia Meigs
  • Beneath the Apple Leaves by Harmony Verna
  • Federal Reports on Police Killings: Ferguson, Cleveland, Baltimore, and Chicago by U.S. Department of Justice
  • Part of the Silence by Debbie Howells
  • Home for the Summer by Holly Chamberlin
  • American Dreams by Janet Dailey
  • The Shipkiller: A Novel by Justin Scott
  • The Enemy Above: A Novel of World War II by Michael P. Spradlin
  • Dawn Over Zero: The Story of the Atomic Bomb by William L. Laurence
  • Carrier War by Lt. Oliver Jensen
  • Red Sky at Night: The Story of Jo Capka by Capt. Jo Capka
  • East River by Sholem Asch and A. H. Gross
  • Before We Were Yours: A Novel by Lisa Wingate
  • The List by Siobhan Vivian
  • Stolen by Lucy Christopher
  • Five Presidents: My Extraordinary Journey with Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, and Ford by Lisa Mccubbin and Clint Hill
  • Only Yesterday by Frederick Lewis Allen
  • Since Yesterday by Frederick Lewis Allen
  • Can't Stop Lovin' You by Lynnette Austin
  • The Inseparables: A Novel by Stuart Nadler
  • Chiefs: A Novel (25th Anniversary Edition) by Stuart Woods
  • Sexual Violence in a Digital Age by Nicola Henry and Anastasia Powell
  • The CBS Murders: A True Account of Greed and Violence in New York's Diamond District by Richard Hammer

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