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	The lies they told
	
 by Ellen Marie Wiseman
In 1930s Virginia, Lena Conti, a young immigrant mother separated from her family at Ellis Island, builds a new life in the Blue Ridge Mountains but must resist a brutal eugenics campaign that targets her community and threatens to take her daughter.
 
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	Aurora 7
	
 by Thomas Mallon
On May 24, 1962, as astronaut Scott Carpenter orbits Earth, the lives of various individuals, including a space-obsessed boy named Gregory, intertwine in unexpected ways, culminating in a fateful connection during the astronaut's mission. 
 
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	The Briar Club : a novel
	
 by Kate Quinn
In 1950 Washington, DC, at an all-female boardinghouse called Briarwood, mysterious widow Grace March moves into the attic room, drawing her oddball collection of neighbors into unlikely friendship, but when a shocking act of violence tears the house apart, the women must expose the true enemy in their midst.
 
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	The story collector
	
 by Evie Woods
In a quiet village in Ireland, a mysterious local myth is about to change everything, in a novel by the best-selling author of The Lost Bookshop.
 
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	This other Eden : a novel
	
 by Paul Harding
Inspired by the true story of Malaga Island, an isolated island off the coast of Maine that became one of the first racially integrated towns in the Northeast, this novel brings to life an unforgettable cast of characters who struggle to preserve human dignity in the face of intolerance and injustice.
 
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	The storm we made : a novel
	
 by Vanessa Chan
In 1945 Malaya, when her family is in terrible danger due to a choice she made 10 years earlier, Cecily Alcantara, who was lured into a life of espionage for the invading Japanese forces during World War II, finds her actions catching up with her and will do anything to save those she loves.
 
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	The little liar : a novel
	
 by Mitch Albom
A trustworthy boy who has never told a lie, 11-year-old Nico Krispis, duped by a German officer into leading his family and fellow Jewish residents to their doom, becomes a pathological liar, in a story that explores honesty, devotion and revenge—and the power of love to ultimately redeem us.
 
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	Eleanore of Avignon : a novel
	
 by Elizabeth DeLozier
In 1347 Provence, midwife Elea Blanchet becomes an apprentice to the Pope's physician and must navigate the complexities of her social status, a burgeoning career in medicine and the impending Black Death while facing accusations of witchcraft.
 
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	The Briar Club : a novel
	
 by Kate Quinn
In 1950 Washington, DC, at an all-female boardinghouse called Briarwood, mysterious widow Grace March moves into the attic room, drawing her oddball collection of neighbors into unlikely friendship, but when a shocking act of violence tears the house apart, the women must expose the true enemy in their midst.
 
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	The Sons of El Rey
	
 by Alex Espinoza
While Freddy Vega struggles to save his luchador father's gym, his son Julian seeks professional and romantic fulfillment as a Mexican American gay man refusing to be defined by stereotypes, in this intimate portrait of a family wading against time and legacy, yet always choosing the fight.
 
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	Polostan
	
 by Neal Stephenson
From the #1 New York Times bestselling author of Termination Shock and Cryptonomicon, the first installment in a new series—an expansive historical epic of intrigue and international espionage, presaging the dawn of the Atomic Age.
 
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	The Sunflower House
	
 by Adriana Allegri
Allina Gottlieb's peaceful life in 1939 Germany shatters when she is forced to work as a nurse in Hochland Home, a facility for breeding Aryan children, where she conceals her Jewish identity and develops a risky relationship with Karl, an SS officer with his own hidden secrets.
 
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	Eleanore of Avignon : a novel
	
 by Elizabeth DeLozier
In 1347 Provence, midwife Elea Blanchet becomes an apprentice to the Pope's physician and must navigate the complexities of her social status, a burgeoning career in medicine and the impending Black Death while facing accusations of witchcraft.
 
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	The Sound of a Thousand Stars
	
 by Rachel Robbins
Jewish physicist Alice Katz, defying her family's expectations, joins the secretive government project in Los Alamos during World War II, where she meets Caleb Blum, an Orthodox Jew in the explosives division, and amidst the race to develop a weapon before the Nazis, they navigate fear, uncertainty, and an unexpected romance.
 
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	The Shadow Key
	
 by Susan Stokes-Chapman
On an isolated estate in late-18th-century rural Wales, a young English doctor uncovers dangerous secrets that may threaten his own life, in a Gothic tale by the best-selling author of Pandora.
 
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	The Paris Understudy
	
 by Aurélie Thiele
A debut novel that brings to life the hard choices Parisians made--or failed to make--under Nazi occupation, in the tradition of Pam Jenoff and Fiona Davis.
 
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	The Mesmerist
	
 by Caroline Woods
In a book ripped from the headlines of history, three very different women must work together to stop a killer and save the truest home they've ever known.
 
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	Katharine, the Wright Sister
	
 by Tracey Enerson Wood
This sweeping historical novel finally tells the often-overlooked story of the Wright brothers' younger sister, Katharine, who kept their business afloat, secured financial backers, marketing their invention worldwide and held the family together.
 
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	Nicked
	
 by M. T. Anderson
In 1087, when Tyun, a treasure hunter renowned for“liberating” holy relics from their tombs, is paid to bring the 700-year-old bones of Saint Nicholas to Bari, Italy, to cure the plague, Brother Nicephorus is ordered to be his guide and forced to commit an act of sacrilege on their journey.
 
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	The Last Twelve Miles : a novel
	
 by Erika Robuck
During the Prohibition Rum Wars, which created a booming smuggling economy, two women masterminds—Elizebeth Friedman, the inventor of cryptanalysis working for the government, and Marie Waite, on the rise to rumrunner royalty to save her family—will go to any lengths to rule the Gulf Coast.
 
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	Maria : a novel of Maria von Trapp
	
 by Michelle Moran
In the 1950s, when Oscar Hammerstein is asked to write a musical based on Maria von Trapp, he reinvents her life for the stage, but when Maria sees the script, she sets off to confront Hammerstein, which leads to an unlikely friendship with his secretary, to whom she tells her real story.
 
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	The Thirteenth Husband
	
 by Greer Macallister
Multimillionaire Aimee Crocker, after her and her husband divorce in the scandal of the century, travels the world but remains uneasy, restless and plagued by tragedy, and as the 20th century begins, she must find the strength to build yet another life for herself and achieve the happiness she's longed for all these years.
 
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	Last House : or The age of oil
	
 by Jessica Shattuck
"From the New York Times bestselling author of The Women in the Castle comes a sweeping story of a nation on the rise, and one family's deeply complicated relationship to the resource that built their fortune and fueled their greatest tragedy, perfect for fans of The Dutch House and The Great Circle."
 
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	Held
	
 by Anne Michaels
A war-wounded soldier in 1920 returns home to Yorkshire and has his past push into the present when ghosts with indecipherable messages begin to show up in his photographs, in the new novel from the author of Fugitive Pieces.
 
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	Shelterwood : a novel
	
 by Lisa Wingate
In 1990 Oklahoma, Valerie, a Law Enforcement Ranger reporting for duty at Horsethief Trail National Park, is immediately faced with the long-hidden burial site of three children, and working with the neighboring Choctaw Tribal Police, unearths old secrets and the tragic and deadly history of the land itself.
 
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	A Shadow in Moscow
	
 by Katherine Reay
Two courageous female spies, one with MI6 and the other with CIA during the Cold War in Moscow, must work together before the KGB closes in and destroys them both.
 
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	The Glassmaker
	
 by Tracy Chevalier
From the height of Renaissance-era Italy to the present day, this spellbinding novel follows Orsola Rosso and her family of glassblowers as they live through creative triumph and heartbreaking loss, and how through every era, the Rosso women ensure their work, and their bonds, endure.
 
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	Flipping Boxcars : a novel
	
 by Cedric Kyles
Struggling to get by during the Great Depression and World War II, Babe, a gambler with a heart of gold and the gift of gab, when he endangers the little security his family has, risks everything for one big score—a make-or-break scheme involving railroad boxcars.
 
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	The goddess of Warsaw : a novel
	
 by Lisa Barr
A legendary Hollywood screen goddess, Lena Browning uses her power and fame to get revenge on the Nazis who escaped justice after the war, hoping to right the past's wrongs, but when an old enemy resurfaces, she must use her skills to protect herself and those she loves, then and now. 
 
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	The passionate Tudor : a novel of Queen Mary I
	
 by Alison Weir
Allowed to return to court as King Henry VIII's default heir after being declared a bastard, Mary, the first female queen to rule Britain, embarks on a ruthless campaign to force Catholicism on the English by burning hundreds of Protestants at the stake, earning her the name Bloody Mary.
 
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	Cradles of the Reich : a novel
	
 by Jennifer Coburn
The story of three women, a nation on the brink of disaster and the countless lives that hang in the balance.
 
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	The apartment : a novel
	
 by Ana Menâendez
In the Helena, an art deco apartment building that has witnessed the changing face of South Miami Beach for 70 years, new resident Lana, a mysterious woman struggling with her own past, will be either healed or overwhelmed by its residents.
 
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	Two wars and a wedding : a novel
	
 by Lauren Willig
As the Spanish-American war begins, archaeologist Betsy Hayes joins the Red Cross in search of her former best friend and follows Teddy Roosevelt's Rough Riders straight to the heart of the fighting where dark memories of her last war resurface and her need to protect old and new friends intensifies.
 
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	The armor of light
	
 by Ken Follett
In a new era of manufacturing and industry, and as war in Europe engulfs the entire continent and beyond in 1770, a cast of unforgettable characters in Kingsbridge, England, are left to reckon with the future and a world they must rebuild from the ashes.
 
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	All the demons are here
	
 by Jake Tapper
Two siblings, one an AWOL marine working off the grid for Evel Knievel and the other a star reporter, deal with the culturally weird events of 1977, including the Summer of Sam and the death of Elvis. 
 
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	Black wolf : a novel
	
 by Kathleen Kent
A female CIA agent whose extraordinary facial recognition powers lead her into the dangerous heart of the Soviet Union—and the path of a killer who shouldn't exist.
 
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	Good night, Irene
	
 by Luis Alberto Urrea
After D-Day, two heroic Red Cross women, Irene Woodward and Dorothy Dunford join the Allied soldiers streaming into France where they are embroiled in danger, from the Battle of the Bulge to the liberation of Buchenwald, and where Irene learns to trust again through their friendship.
 
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	No one prayed over their graves
	
 by Khåalid Khalåifah
In 1907 Syria, after close friends Hanna and Zakariya return to their village near Aleppo after a night of drunken carousing in the city to discover there's been a massive flood, leaving nearly everyone dead, Hanna transforms into an ascetic mystic obsessed with investigating the meaning of life.
 
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	Gilded mountain : a novel
	
 by Kate Manning
A young 1900s Colorado woman starts work at a wealthy mine-owner's manor house and is fascinated by luxury around her until she discovers the family's philosophy is at odds with the unfair labor practices that built their fortune.
 
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	He who drowned the world
	
 by Shelley Parker-Chan
After her victory against the Mongol masters, Zhu Yuanzhang, the Radiant King, seeks to crown herself emperor, but faces threats from similarly minded others, in the second novel of the duology following So Who Became the Sun. 
 
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	Go as a river
	
 by Shelley Read
A 1940s teenager running her family's peach farm in Colorado meets a young man with a mysterious past and feels an instant connection but must flee to a small shack in the wilderness after tragedy strikes.
 
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	Calling Ukraine
	
 by Johannes Lichtman
Shortly after his thirtieth birthday in 2018, John Turner accepts a job offer from an old college friend to move to Ukraine to teach customer service agents there how to sound American, but with no knowledge of the language and struggling to understand the culture and customs, he finds himself in a romantic entanglement with disastrous consequences.
 
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	Chasing Shadows
	
 by Lynn N. Austin
For fans of bestselling WWII fiction comes a powerful novel from Lynn Austin about three women whose lives are instantly changed when the Nazis invade the neutral Netherlands, forcing each into a complicated dance of choice and consequence. Lena is a wife and mother who farms alongside her husband in the tranquil countryside. Her faith has always been her compass, but can she remain steadfast when the questions grow increasingly complex and the answers could mean the difference between life and death? Lena's daughter Ans has recently moved to the bustling city of Leiden, filled with romantic notions of a new job and a young Dutch police officer. But when she is drawn into Resistance work, her idealism collides with the dangerous reality that comes with fighting the enemy. Miriam is a young Jewish violinist who immigrated for the safety she thought Holland would offer. She finds love in her new country, but as her family settles in Leiden, the events that follow will test them in ways she could never have imagined. The Nazi invasion propels these women onto paths that cross in unexpected, sometimes-heartbreaking ways. Yet the story that unfolds illuminates the surprising endurance of the human spirit and the power of faith and love to carry us through
 
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	Crook manifesto : a novel
	
 by Colson Whitehead
A furniture store owner and ex-grifter leaves the straight and narrow path when he needs Jackson 5 tickets for his daughter in 1971 Manhattan, in the new novel by the two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Nickel Boys. 
 
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	The Lindbergh Nanny
	
 by Mariah Fredericks
In 1932 New Jersey, Lindbergh nanny Betty Gow, after toddler Charles Lindbergh Jr. is kidnapped, becomes a suspect in the eyes of both the media and public, and must find the truth in order to clear her name and find justice for the child she loves.
 
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	Coronation Year 
	
 by Jennifer Robson
Follows the owner and three very different residents of the Blue Lion Hotel as London prepares to celebrate the upcoming coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953.
 
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	The Seamstress of Sardinia
	
 by Bianca Pitzorno
In 1900 Sardinia, an intelligent and ambitious young woman with an impossible dream--to become the seamstress for a wealthy family--is drawn into a world far different than her own where she observes the town's residents, who are not quite what they pretend to be.
 
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	Beyond That, the Sea
	
 by Laura Spence-Ash
A young girl is sent from London to live in America during World War II and fits in so seamlessly with her new family that she is hesitant to return to post-war England when she is called home.
 
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	The Perishing
	
 by Natashia Deâon
During Prohibition, Lou, the first Black female journalist at the Los Angeles Timesand possibly immortal, must recover the memory of her past and make sense of the jumble of lifetimes calling to her, just as new forces rise to threaten the existence of those around her.
 
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	Essex Dogs
	
 by Dan Jones
A group of unruly archers and men-at-arms land on the beaches of Normandy in 1346 to fight for the throne in the fiction debut of the best-selling New York Times historian behind Powers and Thrones.
 
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	On a Night of a Thousand Stars
	
 by Andrea Yaryura Clark
After hearing a woman's cryptic comments to her wealthy diplomat father at their annual summer soiree, Paloma becomes curious about his past, setting in motion a chain of events that cause her to question her family and identity, but also puts her life in danger. 
 
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	Defending Britta Stein
	
 by Ronald H. Balson
A husband and wife team of lawyers take on opposing sides in a defamation case against a local Danish American war hero and a protestor in the latest addition to the series following The Girl from Berlin.
 
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	The Lion: A Novel of Ancient Athens
	
 by Conn Iggulden
Enter Pericles--the Lion of Athens. Behind him lies the greatest city of the ancient world. Before him stands the ferocious Persian army. Both sides are spoiling for war. But Pericles knows one thing: to fight a war you must first win the peace. It's time for a hero to rise. For his enemies to tremble. And for a city to shine like a beacon...
 
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	Jewel of the Nile
	
 by Tessa Afshar
Whispered secrets about her parents' past take on new urgency for Chariline as she pays one last visit to the land of her forefathers, the ancient kingdom of Cush. Raised as an orphan by her aunt, Chariline has only been told a few pieces of her parents' tragic love story. Her beautiful dark skin is proof that her father was Cushite, but she knows nothing else. While visiting her grandfather before his retirement as the Roman official in the queen's court, Chariline overhears that her father is still alive, and discovering his identity becomes her obsession. Both her grandfather and the queen have reasons for keeping this secret, however, and forbid her quest. So when her only clues lead to Rome, Chariline sneaks on the ship of a merchant trusted by friends. Theo is shocked to discover a stowaway on board his vessel and determines to be rid of her as soon as possible. But drawn in by Chariline's story, he feels honor-bound to see her safely to shore, especially when it appears someone may be willing to kill for the truth she seeks. In this transformative tale of historical fiction, bestselling author Tessa Afshar brings to life the kingdom of Cush and the Roman Empire, introducing readers to a fascinating world filled with gripping adventure, touching romance, and a host of lovable characters-including some they may recognize from the biblical book of Acts.
 
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	Act of Oblivion
	
 by Robert Harris
Follows General Edward Whalleys and his son-in law Colonel William Goffes flight to America in 1660 after their involvement in the beheading of King Charles I, in the new novel from the best-selling author of Fatherland.
 
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	A Thousand Steps
	
 by T. Jefferson Parker
A teenager with a stoner mom and a deadbeat dad searches for his missing sister who police have written off as just another runaway hippie chick during the summer of 1968 in Laguna Beach, California. 
 
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	Evening Hero
	
 by Marie G. Lee
When the rural Minnesota hospital where he is a practicing obstetrician closes, a Korean immigrant confronts the life he built after the war and the assumptions he made about the so-called American Dream.
 
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	Lessons in Chemistry
	
 by Bonnie Garmus
In the early 1960s, chemist and single mother Elizabeth Zott, the reluctant star of Americas most beloved cooking show due to her revolutionary skills in the kitchen, uses this opportunity to dare women to change the status quo.
 
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	The Apollo Murders
	
 by Chris Hadfield
In the year 1973, NASA launches Apollo 18, a space mission which has been tasked with stopping a secret Soviet space station which has been spying on America.
 
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	The Paper Daughters of Chinatown
	
 by Heather B. Moore
Based on true events, follows the story of one of many young, Chinese women who traveled to 19th century San Francisco for an arranged marriage, but were sold into prostitution, and the pioneering advocate who helped them.
 
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	The Dickens Boy
	
 by Thomas Keneally
The son of Englands most famous author, Edward Dickens, is sent to Australia to make something of himselfor at least fall out of the public eyewhere he works hard to prove to his parents and himself that he can succeed in this vast and unfamiliar wilderness.
 
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	Moon and the Mars
	
 by Kia Corthron
Set in the impoverished Five Points district of New York City in the years 1857-1863, this novel is told through the eyes of Theo, an orphan living between the homes of her Black and Irish grandparents, as the nation divides and marches to war.
 
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	The Living and the Lost
	
 by Ellen Feldman
Living and working in a bombed-out Berlin, Millie Mosbach must come to terms with a past decision made in a moment of crisis with the help of a mysterious man who is surprisingly understanding of her demons.
 
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	Booth
	
 by Karen Joy Fowler
Describes the multiple scandals, family triumphs and disasters that took their toll on the 10 children of celebrated Shakespearean actor Junius Booth as the North and the South reached a boiling point and the Civil War broke out.
 
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	The Woman with the Blue Star
	
 by Pam Jenoff
Inspired by the harrowing true stories of those who hid from the Nazis in the sewers, this emotional testament to the power of friendship follows Ella, an affluent Polish girl, as she helps Sadie and her pregnant mother survive despite the worsening dangers of the war. 
 
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	The Girl in his Shadow
	
 by Audrey Blake
When Dr. Croft takes in orphan Eleanor Beady, he doesn't realize that he's gained an apprentice. Raised amidst Croft's experiments, "Nora" becomes his most trusted assistant-an unthinkable and unlawful pursuit for a woman. Nora helps Croft's groundbreaking research and his clinic gain recognition, and she finds she doesn't mind working in the background, as long as she can continue to hone her skills. But the arrival of a new surgical resident threatens to undo all that Nora has strived for. Dr. Daniel Gibson is too proper to be trusted, too skilled to dismiss, and too smart to be fooled for long. He expects Nora to change her clothes before dinner and spend her evenings perfecting her needlework, not her sutures. Though Nora knows it's best not to reveal her expansive knowledge of human anatomy, she isn't going to give up the work that fascinates and fulfills her-no matter what it costs her.
 
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	The Godmothers
	
 by Camille Aubray
Godmothers to one another’s children, four women, who married into a prosperous Italian family, must come together, despite secrets and betrayals, when their husbands are forced to leave them during World War II, pitting them against notorious gangsters who run the streets of New York City.
 
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	The Magician
	
 by Colm Tóibín
An intimate, astonishingly complex portrait of writer Thomas Mann, a man profoundly flawed and unforgettable, his magnificent and complex wife Katia, and the times in which they lived—the first world war, the rise of Hitler, World War II, the Cold War, and exile.
 
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	A Most Clever Girl
	
 by Stephanie Thornton
Contending with the recent deaths of her mother and President Kennedy, a young woman seeks information about the shocking family mystery she just uncovered from someone who turns out to be a Cold War double agent. 
 
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	Tenderness
	
 by Alison MacLeod
A Booker Prize-longlisted author brilliantly recreates the origins of D.H. Lawrence’s Lady Chatterley’s Lover and boldly reimagines its journey to freedom through the story of Jackie Kennedy, who was known to be an admirer. 
 
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	Everyman
	
 by M. Shelly Conner
Eve Mann arrives in Ideal, Georgia, in 1972 looking for answers about the mother who died giving her life. A mother named Mercy. A mother who for all of Eve's twenty-two years has been a mystery and a quest. Eve's search for her mother, and the father she never knew, is a mission to discover her identity, her name, her people, and her home. Eve's questions and longing launch a multigenerational story that sprawls back to the turn of the twentieth century, settles into the soil of the South, the blood and souls of Black folk making love and life and fleeing in a Great Migration into the savage embrace of the North. Eve is a young woman coming of age in Chicago against the backdrop of the twin fires and fury of the civil rights and Black Power movements-atime when everything and everyone, it seems, longs to be made anew. At the core of this story are the various meanings of love-how we love and, most of all, whom we love.
 
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	Love and Fury
	
 by Samantha Silva
In August of 1797, as her midwife struggles to keep her and her fragile daughter alive, Mary Wollstonecraft, the mother of famous novelist Mary Shelley, recounts the life she dared to live amidst the impossible constraints and prejudices of the late 18th century.
 
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	Book of the Little Axe
	
 by Lauren Francis-Sharma
Quietly but purposefully rebelling against the life others expect of her in late-18th-century Trinidad, Rosa loses her family's farm when her homeland transitions to British rule, before her half-Crow son finds his coming-of-age challenged by decades-old secrets.
 
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	Dust off the Bones
	
 by Paul Howarth
After their family’s cattle farm is attacked in the 1890s Australian Outback, two estranged brothers reunite to attempt to revive the business and are called to testify after a reprisal slaughter is perpetrated against the Kurrong.
 
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	The King at the Edge of the World
	
 by Arthur Phillips
When Queen Elizabeth I is dying, her spymasters recruit Mahmoud Ezzedine, a Muslim physician, for the task of discovering if her possible successor, King James VI of Scotland, is truly a Protestant or secretly shares his family's Catholicism.
 
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	Wild Women and the Blues
	
 by Denny S. Bryce
In an award-winning debut novel, a sharecropper’s daughter navigates celebrity encounters, bootlegging and gangster activities in Jazz Age Chicago before sharing her story with a grieving film student nearly a century later.
 
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	The Great Mistake
	
 by Jonathan Lee
Investigating the mysterious murder of 83-year-old Andrew Haswell Green at the turn of the 20th century, a New York City detective meets an unforgettable cast of characters as he tries to solve the case of this private and influential man who, in death, has become infamous.
 
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	The City of Tears
	
 by Kate Mosse
A continuation of the story that began with The Burning Chambers is set in Paris, London and Amsterdam and follows the failed efforts of a royal marriage to end a decade-long religious conflict.
 
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	The Girl from the Channel Islands
	
 by Jenny Lecoat
After fleeing Vienna, a Jewish woman living in the British Channel Islands is forced to hide in plain site during the German occupation and to survive must depend on her own courage, her community and a soldier she befriends.
 
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	The Diplomat's Wife
	
 by Pam Jenoff
Surviving a Nazi concentration camp before her child’s father dies in a plane crash, Marta marries a kind diplomat only to have her fleeting happiness sabotaged by the activities of a communist mole in British intelligence.
 
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	The Kitchen Front
	
 by Jennifer Ryan
An indebted young widow, a freedom-seeking kitchen maid, the wife of a wealthy but unkind man and a trained chef navigating sexism compete for a once-in-a-lifetime spot hosting a BBC cooking program during World War II.
 
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	Of Women and Salt
	
 by Gabriela Garcia
The daughter of a Cuban immigrant battles addiction and the fallout of her decision to take in the child of an ICE detainee, while her mother wrestles with displacement trauma and complicated family ties. 
 
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	Ribbons of Scarlet
	
 by Kate Quinn
Six best-selling and award-winning authors trace the events of the French Revolution through the experiences of six remarkable women from different walks of life, including an equal-rights education advocate whose student leads a women’s march to Versailles.
 
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	The Woman of a Thousand Names
	
 by Alexandra Lapierre
From the internationally best-selling author of Between Love and Honor comes a tale based on the true story of the Mata Hari of Russia, featuring a beautiful aristocrat fighting for survival during the deadly Russian Revolution. 
 
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	Annelies
	
 by David R Gillham
An empowering reimagining of Anne Frank as a Holocaust survivor traces her endurance of terrible losses, her struggles to forgive and her development into a highly skilled writer. 
 
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	Fast Girls: A Novel of the 1936 Women's Olympic Team
	
 by Elise Hooper
This novel explores the real life history of female athletes, members of the first integrated women's Olympic team, and their journeys to the 1936 summer games in Berlin, Nazi Germany. It is a chronicle of three athletes who defied society's expectations of what women could achieve.
 
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	The Nesting Dolls
	
 by Alina Adams
Spanning 1930s Siberia to contemporary Brighton Beach, a family saga finds three generations of women in a Jewish-Russian family making fateful choices in their respective efforts to break free from historical dynamics and pursue personal fulfillment. 
 
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	Hades, Argentina
	
 by Daniel Loedel
A medical student in Buenos Aires must decide how far he’s willing to go for his childhood crush and the group of insurgents she’s joined as more and more people like her are disappeared by an oppressive military junta.
 
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	The Innocents
	
 by Michael Crummey
Two orphans forage for survival on an isolated Newfoundland cove during years marked by storms and ravaging illness, before the mystery of their nature tests the limits of their bond. 
 
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	The Murmur of Bees
	
 by Sofía Segovia
When an old woman returns from an unexpected absence with an unusual infant and a swarm of bees, and insists on keeping both, her family adopts the child, and Simonopio grows up surrounded by bees and brings change to the entire region.
 
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	Stories from Suffragette City
	
 by M. J. Rose
Featuring contributions by such authors as Paula McLain and Jamie Ford, an anthology set during the Fifth Avenue women’s suffrage march of October 1915 includes depictions of leading rights advocates, from Ava Vanderbilt to Ida B. Welles.
 
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	All the Ways we Said Goodbye
	
 by Beatriz Williams
An heiress, a Resistance fighter and a widow find their lives intertwined by their wartime experiences and the turbulent 1960s when they seek refuge at Paris’ legendary Ritz hotel.
 
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	Sold on a Monday
	
 by Kristina McMorris
When struggling reporter Ellis Reed takes a photograph of a sign advertising two children for sale in 1931, it leads to his big break and evokes memories from his past.
 
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	The Sun Sister: Electra's Story
	
 by Lucinda Riley
Still reeling from her father's death a famous model grieves through drugs and alcohol until she receives a shocking letter from a stranger claiming to be her grandmother, in a follow up to The Moon Sister.
 
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	Three Hours in Paris
	
 by Cara Black
A suspenseful historical tale based on the mystery of Hitler’s abrupt departure from newly occupied 1940 Paris follows the mission of a British intelligence markswoman who, while trying to assassinate the Führer, discovers that she has been set up.
 
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	Cilka's Journey
	
 by Heather Morris
Russian sixteen-year-old Cilka is forced by a concentration-camp commandant to become his lover and subsquently sent to a Siberian prison camp after being found guilty of collaborating with the enemy.
 
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	An Elegant Woman
	
 by Martha McPhee
A meditation on memory, history, and legacy — and an exploration of the stories we tell ourselves and what we leave out — follows four generations of women in one American family.
 
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	Run Me to Earth
	
 by Paul Yoon
Three children orphaned in 1960s Laos meet a dedicated doctor who enlists them as motorcycle couriers in his effort to rescue civilians and find medical supplies in a novel from the award-winning author of Snow Hunters.
 
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	Tyll
	
 by Daniel Kehlmann
A vagabond and trickster from the 17th century embarks on a journey of discovery as he travels through history in the new novel of magical realism from the internationally best-selling author of You Should Have Left.
 
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	The Beekeeper of Aleppo
	
 by Christy Lefteri
A beekeeper and his artist wife have their lives upended and must flee after war destroys their home in Aleppo, Syria, and they set off on a dangerous journey through Turkey and Greece, towards an uncertain future in England.
 
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	The Body Outside the Kremlin
	
 by James L May
Solovetsky occupies the island site of a former monastery in the White Sea. Here, hundreds of miles from civilization, and with a skeleton crew of secret-policemen in charge, some prisoners are consigned to all kinds of forced labor and others sit at comfortable desks in administrative or cultural positions. With the brutal winter fast approaching, Tolya Bogomolov, a young mathematician serving a three-year sentence, hopes an acquaintance he's been cultivating will lead to a less brutal work assignment, maybe even a little more bread in his ration. Knowing Gennady Antonov holds a privileged position restoring the monks' seized collection of icons ought to improve Tolya’s odds of reassignment. But when Antonov's body is discovered floating frozen in the bay, their connection turns dangerous. At first the authorities question Tolya, but then he’s mystified when they assign him to assist the elderly detective investigating the case—but better to find the real killer than have the murder pinned on him. Digging into Antonov's secrets turns up strange expropriations of the museum's icons, rumors of an escape conspiracy among White Army officers, and an illicit affair with a female prisoner who won't tell all she knows. To avoid becoming the murderer's next victim, Tolya must defy Solovetsky's unforgiving regime and make ruthless use of his fellow prisoners. Putting his story to paper at last means reckoning the true cost of his survival.
 
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	The Book of Lost Friends
	
 by Lisa Wingate
A modern-day teacher discovers the story of three Reconstruction-era women and how it connects to her own students’ lives in this latest from the New York Times best-selling author of Before We Were Yours.
 
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	Country
	
 by Michael Hughes
A suspenseful reimagining of Homer’s Iliad is set in 1996 Northern Ireland and follows the experiences of an IRA fighter whose efforts to reignite the war against the British are complicated by a vengeful sniper’s defection.
 
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	The Evening and the Morning
	
 by Ken Follett
A prequel to the best-selling The Pillars of the Earth follows the experiences of a young boatbuilder, a scholarly monk and a Norman noblewoman against a backdrop of the Viking attacks at the end of the 10th century in England.
 
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	The First Actress
	
 by C. W. Gortner
A historical tale inspired by the life of French actress Sarah Bernhardt traces the rise of a courtesan's daughter whose rebellious style and refusal to give up her child lead her to become the most acclaimed performer of her time.
 
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	The Island of Sea Women
	
 by Lisa See
The ostracized daughter of a Japanese collaborator and the daughter of their Korean village's head female diver share nearly a century of friendship that is tested by their island's torn position between two warring empires.
 
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	Nottingham
	
 by Nathan Makaryk
A complex retelling of the legend of Robin Hood is set in 12th-century England, where anarchy stemming from the king’s absence and sheriff’s indifference turns six people from different walks of life into icons.
 
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	The Shadow King
	
 by Maaza Mengiste
Tending the wounded when her nation is invaded by Mussolini, an orphaned servant in 1935 Ethiopia helps disguise a gentle peasant as their exiled emperor to rally her fellow women in the fight against fascism.
 
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	Today We Go Home
	
 by Kelli Estes
Struggling to heal from a devastating loss while serving in Afghanistan, Larkin Bennett finds the diary of a young woman who disguised herself as a man to fight for the Union during the Civil War and begins to heal. 
 
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            Longwood Public Library800 Middle Country RoadMiddle Island, New York 11953 (631) 924-6400
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