July Staff Picks

blog Book Displays Book recommendations

We’re in the thick of summer and you know what that means–it’s time to grab an unputdownable book, find some shade, and beat the heat with a good story! Not sure what to read this month? Our staff have excellent suggestions for you to browse through:

Madi's Picks

Madi's Picks

A Marvellous Light

A Marvellous Light by Freya Marske

A charming fantasy, filled with mystery and magical conspiracies. 
Delilah Green Doesnt Care

Delilah Green Doesn't Care by Ashley Herring Blake

This sapphic adult romance is brimming with emotion and humor. It will leave you feeling simultaneously giddy and raw. 

Montica's Pick

Montica's Pick

Emma's Pick

Emma's Pick

Grand Prize Winners

Taste of Home Grand Prize Winners

This book is a compilation of the best of Taste of Home, award willing recipes, so they are the best! These recipes are for wholesome, straight forward, crowd pleasing recipes dazzlers.
songweavers vow

The Songweaver's Vow by Laura VanArendonk Baugh

Laura VanArendonk Baugh is a local author who I met last year at the Lew Wallace Hoosier Author Fair. I love mythology so I enjoyed the way this story wove together Norse and Greek mythological tales. 
Toni's Picks

Toni's Picks

355

The 355

This action thriller is full of advanced technologies and powerfully smart women who are caught in a game of espionage with a band of mercenaries. I was taken by the performance of these well-known experienced actresses. This movie is packed with high speed chases, shoot outs, and bigtime stunts across international borders. I found it refreshing to see roles that have been traditionally given to men played by diverse and fascinating women. 

uncharted

Uncharted

If you are interested in action-packed adventures, this movie is for you! Tom Holland delivers intensive high-action stunts and stellar performance as the honorable character who leads his co-star, Mark Wallberg, on an epic treasure hunt. This movie is packed with several well-known stars, stunning locations around the world, and great theatrical compositions. 

There Is No Right Way to Meditate

There Is No Right Way to Meditate

A gentle read with deep thought. The author guides you through numerous ways to think about how and why you should attempt to find time to take control and just relax; true relaxation and not the “expectation of relaxation” in the terms of an exhausting vacation. The book begins with a short statement about Sakugawa’s journey to inner silence and the best possible opening line, “Sometimes it’s okay if the only thing you did today was breathe, breathing lets your family know that you are still alive.”

Rachel D.'s Pick

Rachel D.'s Pick

Mary's Pick

Mary's Pick

deathnote

Death Note

A bored god of death drops his “Death Note” onto Earth to see what a human would do with its power- the ability to kill anyone whose name he writes in it. Obvious chaos ensues.
Night Road by Kristin Hannah

Night Road by Kristin Hannah

A story about teens letting loose in their senior year.   One bad decision raises questions of identity, love and forgiveness.
Shelbi's Picks

Shelbi's Picks

all thats left in the world

All That's Left in the World by Erik J. Brown

A super plague has wiped out the vast majority of the world’s population. Alone in the wilderness and injured, a teenage boy named Andrew stumbles across a house where another boy lives alone and takes a chance, hoping he’s found a brief place to rest and recover. A strong friendship begins to grow from there as they make decisions about their next steps in the post-apocalyptic landscape.

 I HIGHLY recommend the audiobook experience and enjoyed the narrators quite a bit… listening to the story was the only thing that got me through multiple mornings of commuting for a 4am shift.

Honestly I would pay so much to see this exact idea but in like a full-length adult trilogy someday. Thanks, universe! More of this please!

darkness outside of us

The Darkness Outside Us by Eliot Schrefer

Two boys awaken on a spaceship, without much memory of the details leading to their awakening, and with the vague goal that they’re heading to a planetary outpost to rescue a previous spacefarer who has experienced a disaster. But then small details begin to not add up–why are they both missing large periods of their memories? Why are there things they keep encountering around the spaceship (like unaccounted-for patches of dried blood) that can’t be explained properly? Slowly, low levels of dread build up within the characters (and us readers) as they explore these mysteries.

This was a really unexpected meditation on loneliness and isolation, how connections to others help us define ourselves, and (reaching a little but not really) what the point of existence is. Even though this is NOT a time loop story, there are moments that *feel* like it’s a time loop, if that’s your kind of thing. The audiobook was highly listenable and I recommend it!

Dawn's Picks

Dawn's Picks

View From a Sketchbook

View from a Sketchbook by Marjolein Bastin

I’ve enjoyed Marjolein Bastin’s nature artwork since I first saw her illustrated cards at the Hallmark Shop. So I was very excited to find this book with her watercolor artwork and journal entries at the library.
The Anthropocene Reviewed

The Anthropocene Reviewed: Essays on a Human-Centered Planet by John Green

I read this book slowly and with a dictionary over the last year. Now I’m ready to listen to the audiobook read by the author. I give John Green’s thoughtful and thought-provoking book of essays five stars. Highly recommend.
Dennis' Pick

Dennis' Pick

Crystal's Pick

Crystal's Pick

The Very Best of Santana

The Very Best of Santana

Don’t forget about our CD selection located on the 2nd floor!  Carlos Santana is a guitar legend who will turn 75 this month.  Many of his top songs are on this disc,  so why not check it out and have a listen ! 
The Thief Lord

The Thief Lord by Cornelia Funke

Two brothers, having run away from the aunt who plans to adopt the younger one, are sought by a detective hired by their aunt, but they have found shelter with–and protection from–Venice’s “Thief Lord.”