Southlake Public Library Blog

"Where there is no imagination there is no horror."
~Sir Arthur Conan DoyleIt's that time of year again! Halloween is the perfect excuse to come into the library to find a thrilling ghost story to read to your children or to pick up that Stephen King novel you've always wanted to read. Please also join us for our Author's Night (Thursday, October 21, at 6:30 p.m.) with Kathleen Kent, who will discuss her national bestselling novel about the Salem Witch Trials, "The Heretic's Daughter." It's guaranteed to get you into the spirit of the holiday.
FEATURED NEW RELEASE
SO COLD THE RIVER I love Halloween because it gives me an excuse to be scared, well, just a little scared (I'm kind of a wimp). I chose a new release out of the horror genre in hopes that it would provide me with some night reading that would raise a few goose bumps and make me check under the bed. However, I was disappointed in the scare factor of “So Cold the River.” The writing was good, the main character likable, and the setting realistic. I spent time in Indiana for college, so the frequent mention of Bloomington and Indiana University was fun, so any Indiana natives will most likely enjoy that. But it just wasn’t that scary. The story tells of a down-on-his-luck movie director, Eric Shaw, whose career is a wreck and who now resorts to putting together video montages for funeral services. A woman hires him to travel to a resort town in southern Indiana to tell the story of her father-in-law, Campbell Bradford, a wealthy nonagenarian. The only clue she gives him is an old bottle of mineral water, for which the area was famous. Shaw ingests some of the water and begins to experience frighteningly vivid visions. Along with the visions come killer headaches, for which the only remedy is to drink more mineral water. He teams up with a scholar from Bloomington, Kellen, who is also investigating Campbell Bradford, but they quickly figure out that they are researching two different men. Kellen’s Bradford was a truly evil man who ruled the valley during the era of Prohibition and the Great Depression. Shaw begins to suspect that Bradford’s spirit is fighting to wreak havoc once more, so Shaw and Kellen must solve the mystery of the two Bradfords before that happens. By Michael Koryta, Call #: F KOR
FICTION HARDCOVER

THE REVERSAL, by Michael Connelly. (Little, Brown, $27.99.) The defense lawyer Mickey Haller and the L.A.P.D. detective Harry Bosch join forces against a child-killer.
Call #: F CON

FALL OF GIANTS, by Ken Follett. (Dutton, $36.) Five interrelated families from five countries are caught in the upheavals of World War I and the Russian Revolution. Book 1 of the Century trilogy.
Call #: F FOL

FREEDOM, by Jonathan Franzen. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $28.) A family of Midwestern liberals during the Bush years; by the author of “The Corrections.”
Call #: F FRA

THE GIRL WHO KICKED THE HORNETS' NEST, by Stieg Larsson. (Knopf, $27.95.) The third volume of a trilogy about a Swedish hacker and a journalist.
Call #: F LAR

SAFE HAVEN, by Nicholas Sparks. (Grand Central, $25.99.) The arrival of a mysterious young woman in a small North Carolina town raises questions about her past.
Call #: F SPA

SQUIRREL SEEKS CHIPMUNK, by David Sedaris. (Little Brown, $21.99.) The humorist looks at human nature through stories with animals as characters.
Call #: F SED

DON'T BLINK, by James Patterson and Howard Roughan. (Little Brown, $27.99.) After a gruesome murder in a New York steak house, a reporter finds himself involved in a war between the Italian mob and the Russian mafia.
Call #: F PAT

PAINTED LADIES, by Robert B. Parker. (Putnam, $26.95.) Spenser’s latest assignment is to provide protection during the ransoming of a stolen painting.
Call #: F PAR

PROMISE ME, by Richard Paul Evans. (Simon & Schuster, $19.99.) On Christmas Day, a woman with family problems meets a handsome, mysterious stranger.
Call #: F EVA

THE HELP, by Kathryn Stockett. (Amy Einhorn/Putnam, $24.95.) A young white woman and two black maids in 1960s Mississippi.
Call #: F STO

BAD BLOOD, by John Sandford. (Putnam, $27.95.) Virgil Flowers is summoned to investigate a monstrous multigenerational conspiracy.
Call #: F SAN

LEGACY, by Danielle Steel. (Delacorte, $28.) A writer’s stunning family discovery leads to Paris, the French aristocracy and a mysterious Sioux ancestor.
Call #: F STE
GETTING TO HAPPY, by Terry McMillan. (Viking, $27.95.) Revisiting the four women from “Waiting to Exhale,” 15 years later.
Call #: F MCM

ROOM, by Emma Donoghue. (Little, Brown, $24.99.) A mother’s prison is her young son’s entire world.
Call #: F DON
NONFICTION HARDCOVER

OBAMA'S WARS, by Bob Woodward. (Simon & Schuster, $30.) How decisions were made on the war in Afghanistan, the campaign in Pakistan and the fight against terrorism.
Call#: 973.932 WOO

EARTH (THE BOOK), by Jon Stewart and others. (Grand Central, $27.99.) A visitor’s guide to the human race, presented by "The Daily Show."
Call#: 818.602 STE

AT HOME, by Bill Bryson. (Doubleday, $28.95.) The evolution of private life as exemplified by the houses we live in.
Call#: 643.1 BRY

PINHEADS AND PATRIOTS, by Bill O'Reilly. (Morrow/HarperCollins, $27.99.) The Fox News commentator scrutinizes the meaning of change in the era of Obama. Call#: 973.932 ORE

WASHINGTON, by Ron Chernow. (Penguin Press, $40.) A biography of the first president.
Call#: BIO WAS

THE GRAND DESIGN, by Stephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow. (Bantam, $28.) Central questions of philosophy and science, from the author of “A Brief History of Time.”
Call#: 523.1 HAW
CHILDRENS CHAPTER BOOKS

TORMENT, by Lauren Kate. (Delacorte, $17.99.) A novel about the nephilim, the children of humans and fallen angels. (Ages 12 and up)
Call #: YA F KAT

THE RED PYRAMID, by Rick Riordan. (Disney-Hyperion, $17.99.) Ancient gods (this time from Egypt) and a mortal family meet. (Ages 10 and up)
Call #: J F RIO

CLOCKWORK ANGEL, by Cassandra Clare. (McElderry/Simon & Schuster, $19.99.) Victorian England proves a treacherous place. (Ages 14 and up)
Call #: YA F CLA

LINGER, by Maggie Stiefvater. (Scholastic Press/Scholastic, $17.99.) The teenage werewolves of "Shiver" face a new test of love and loyalty. (Ages 12 and up)
Call #: YA F STI

BIG NATE: IN A CLASS BY HIMSELF, written and illustrated by Lincoln Peirce. (Harper/HarperCollins, $12.99.) Wherever Nate goes, trouble is sure to follow. (Ages 8 to 12)
Call #: J F PEI

THE SEARCH FOR WONDLA, written and illustrated by Tony DiTerlizzi. (Simon & Schuster, $17.99.) Eva Nine, who lives underground, surfaces to escape danger. (Ages 10 and up)
Call #: J F DIT

TALES FROM A NOT-SO-POPULAR PARTY GIRL, by Rachel Renée Russell. (Aladdin, $12.99.) The further reflections of Nikki Maxwell on the agonies of middle school; a "Dork Diaries" book. (Ages 9 to 13)
Call #: J F RUS
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