Matariki – the Māori New Year – takes place on Pipiri 28 June. There will be Matariki storytimes and activities at our libraries throughout June.
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New and Recently Released!
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Blood pact
by David Hagberg
Approached by a shadowy organization that would claim a conquistador treasure, Kirk McGarvey embarks on a dangerous competition from Washington to Seville, where he confronts one of the most ruthless assassins of his career. By the best-selling author of Allah's Scorpion.
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| Sting of the drone by Richard A. ClarkeCounterterrorism expert Richard Clarke's chillingly plausible tale centers on the consequences of using drones in lethal attacks half a world away. In Sting of the Drone, a survivor of a drone attack uses his contacts to declare war on the drone program and its operators. Soon, they're being killed off one by one as a team scrambles to protect them. Full of technical details when it comes to the U.S. military and its state-of-the-art weaponry, this thriller provides plenty of insider information and rising tension -- and "sets the standard" by which other thrillers will be judged (Publishers Weekly). |
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| The book of you: a novel by Claire KendalAfter a disturbing evening with a colleague about which she remembers little but suspects plenty, university administrator Clarissa Bourne becomes the unwilling target of this man's constant texts, calls, visits, and gifts. Jury duty comes as a relief, until Clarissa realises that the violent crime unfolding in front of the jury box has parallels to her own life -- and demonstrates just how easily her experiences could be discredited. Her colleague's obsession with her has crossed the line between fantasy and reality, and his threats escalate as she begins friendships with other jurors. "Troubling, raw, and gripping" says Publishers Weekly of this suspenseful debut. |
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| The intern's handbook: a thriller by Shane KuhnWritten in the form of a handbook for new recruits at Human Resources, Inc. (more on that in a minute), this darkly funny, violent tale offers plenty of surprises. For one, HR, Inc. has nothing to do with payrolls or benefits -- rather, it trains society's discarded children to become successful assassins/interns in corporate America. At 24, John Lago is nearing the mandatory retirement age, but he's got one last internship, during which he's supposed to kill a law partner who's been selling the names of people in the witness protection program. His plans, however, may be thwarted by a pretty colleague at the law firm who might also be hiding her true motivation for her employment there. Fans of Josh Bazell's Beat the Reaper will likely enjoy this clever, graphic, and fast-paced debut. |
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The dead ground
by Claire McGowan
A stolen baby. A murdered woman. A decades-old atrocity. Something connects them all. A month before Christmas, and Ballyterrin on the Irish border lies under a thick pall of snow. When a newborn baby goes missing from hospital, it's all too close to home for forensic psychologist Paula Maguire, who's wrestling with the hardest decision of her life. Then a woman is found in a stone circle with her stomach cut open and it's clear a brutal killer is on the loose. As another child is taken and a pregnant woman goes missing, Paula is caught up in the hunt for a killer no one can trace, who will stop at nothing to get what they want.
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Sorrow bound
by David Mark
Already awash in violent crime investigations due to a sadistic new drug lord, DS Aector McAvoy and Detective Superintendent Trish Pharaoh must also hunt down a serial killer, in this new novel in the series following Original Skin.
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The coal black asphalt tomb
by David Handler
An unpopular public works project under the leadership of a woman First Selectman is further complicated by the discovery of a body beneath Dorset Street that prompts Desiree and Mitch to confront the historic village's aristocracy.
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"The real story is even more harrowing than the one I wrote." ~ Brian Haig, American author, on The Hunted
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| Infamous by Ace AtkinsIn this action-packed novel, author Ace Atkins vividly recreates the career of real-life gangster George "Machine Gun" Kelly, a small-time crook who, urged by his ambitious wife, takes on his biggest job ever: kidnapping wealthy Oklahoma oilman Charles Urschel. But with other gangsters anxious for a piece of the action and a persistent federal agent hot on his trail, can the new "Public Enemy No. 1" survive the big time -- or will he end up doing hard time? If 1930s gangsters interest you, you can also try Elmore Leonard's The Hot Kid or Max Allan Collins' graphic novel Road to Perdition, though as real and colourful as they might seem, neither of these are based on historical figures or events. Or, try Atkins' other historical suspense novels based on real people and events, Devil's Garden, Wicked City, or White Shadow. |
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| The network: a novel by Jason ElliotWith its slower pace and strongly depicted setting, this tale of a pre-9/11 mission in Afghanistan will appeal to readers wanting an in-depth look at the dangers of Al Qaeda. Newly recruited by the British Secret Service, explosives expert Anthony Taverner is sent to retrieve or destroy a couple of Stinger missiles before they are captured by terrorists and used against civilians. But first he must undergo extensive training -- psychological, physical, and weapons-based. Chillingly, this novel is based on real people and real events; suspense and betrayals abound. |
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| The second objective by Mark FrostIt's late in 1944 and the Nazis have launched a last-ditch attempt to defeat the Allies: 2,000 English-speaking Nazi soldiers familiar with American culture are to be disguised as American soldiers in order to infiltrate the enemy's defenses. Of the 2,000 men led by Lieutenant Colonel Otto Skorzeny, 20 have a secret second agenda -- an assassination that will change the course of history. The only man to figure out what the Germans are up to is a former NYC policeman, who will need all his wits and training to defeat the nefarious Nazi plot. Publishers Weekly calls the meld of fact (it's based on a Nazi plot called "Operation Greif," which actually did involve German soldiers dressed as Allies) and fiction "thriller gold." |
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| The hunted by Brian HaigAlex Konevitch made a lot of money in the Russian construction business by working hard and making smart decisions. But he also made some enemies along the way, which becomes exceedingly clear when a KGB higher-up steals his company and his wealth and frames him for several crimes. Fleeing with his wife to the U.S., Alex struggles amid these false accusations -- and the hard-earned knowledge that his new homeland is just as rife with corruption as his old one. Based on a true story, this fast-paced thriller will appeal to readers who enjoy tales of government-sanctioned victimisation. |
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| The butterfly cabinet: a novel by Bernie McGillIn 1892, Harriet Ormond, the mistress of Oranmore House, was sent to prison for killing her four-year-old daughter, Charlotte, by binding her hands and shutting her inside a wardrobe. In 1968, Harriet's granddaughter Anna visits 92-year-old Maddie McGlade, a nursing home resident who was a servant at the estate at the time of Charlotte's death, seeking answers. Alternating between Maddie's account of her years at Oranmore and Harriet's own diary, this "chilling and gripping" (Booklist) novel slowly pieces together what really happened on that fateful day. Loosely based on a true story, The Butterfly Cabinet combines gothic suspense with an examination of social class and politics in late-19th-century Northern Ireland. |
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Contact your librarian for more great books!
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