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Read-Alikes for ‘Beautiful Ugly’ by Alice Feeney | LibraryReads

George Lichman | Reviewer of the Year 2024

Katherine Sleyko | Reviewer of the Year 2024

Matthew Galloway | Reviewer of the Year 2024

Thomas J. (TJ) Davis | Reviewer of the Year 2024

LJ’s Reviewers of the Year 2024 | Outstanding Work in Books

LJ Talks with Nat Cassidy, Author and Playwright of Speculative Fiction

Dublin Literary Award Longlist Is Announced | Book Pulse

Nero Book Award Winners | Book Pulse

‘Beautiful Ugly’ by Alice Feeney Tops Holds Lists | Book Pulse

Thao Thai’s ‘Banyan Moon’ Wins Crook’s Corner Book Prize | Book Pulse

Pacific Northwest Book Awards Winners | Book Pulse

New Books for the New Year | January 2025 Starred Reviews

Display Shelf | Mocktails

Display Shelf | New Habits

‘The River Has Roots’ by Amal El-Mohtar | SFF Pick of the Month

Read-Alikes for ‘Beg, Borrow, or Steal’ by Sarah Adams | LibraryReads

‘My Big Fat Fake Marriage’ by Charlotte Stein | Romance Pick of the Month

‘Broken Fields’ by Marcie R. Rendon | Mystery Pick of the Month

Prepub Alert: The Complete List | June 2025 Titles

Authors Nominated for NAACP Image Awards | Book Pulse

LitHub’s Most Anticipated Books of 2025 | Book Pulse

‘Beg, Borrow, or Steal’ by Sarah Adams Tops Holds Lists | Book Pulse

Coastal: 130 Recipes from a California Road Trip

Cooks who fell in love with the food of Southern France in Rebekah Peppler’s Le Sud or discovered the joys of cooking in Maine with Erin French’s The Lost Kitchen will be equally enamored with Clark’s loving culinary celebration of the best that California’s Central Coast has to offer.

The Portable Feminist Reader

Worth picking up for Gay’s introspective yet inclusive introduction alone, this new collection provides accessible entry points into feminism and offers even advanced scholars new ways of viewing the complex, intersectional histories of feminist thought, literature, and action.
PREMIUM

Another World Is Possible: Lessons for America from Around the Globe

This book is recommended and appropriate for libraries supporting students and general readers interested in exploring governmental policies from abroad that could work in the U.S.

The Maps They Gave Us: One Marriage, Reimagined

Emotional, raw, and real, this memoir is a deep dive into one couple’s trials and triumphs to redefine marriage to fit their lives and needs. A valuable addition to memoir collections.
PREMIUM

The Banks We Deserve: Reclaiming Community Banking for a Just Economy

A fresh take on banking that will show readers how credit unions and community banks can improve the social, economic, and environmental situations of the people they serve.
PREMIUM

Queer Lasting: Ecologies of Care for a Dying World

This compelling, evocative book expertly centers queer writing and resilience to imagine new approaches to living during environmental crises. It’s an excellent choice for scholars, students, and general readers of queer studies and ecocriticism. Pair with The Queerness of Water: Troubled Ecologies in the Eighteenth Century by Jeremy Chow.

Gentlemen of the Woods: Manhood, Myth, and the American Lumberjack

Written in clear prose with well-founded arguments, this book, heavily illustrated with archival photographs and drawings, makes an excellent addition to history collections. For general audiences interested in Americana.
PREMIUM

The Countess and the Nazis: An American Family’s Private War

Many family photos enliven this engrossing, recommended history that will take readers right into the difficult times it depicts.
PREMIUM

On the Hippie Trail: Istanbul to Kathmandu and the Making of a Travel Writer

Steves’s journal offers a window into time, before travel through the greater Middle East became vastly more complicated. Recommended for Steves’s fans and armchair travelers.
PREMIUM

The Rebel Empresses: Elisabeth of Austria and Eugénie of France, Power and Glamour in the Struggle for Europe

Fascinating insight into the lives of two remarkable women who may be unfamiliar to readers in the United States. Especially recommended for readers interested in biographies about royals.
PREMIUM

The Licensing Racket: How We Decide Who Is Allowed To Work, and Why It Goes Wrong

Allensworth gives readers accessible descriptions of the professional licensing process and attendant problems. She explains the reasons for caring about this weighty topic and suggests solutions.

From Trenton to Yorktown: Turning Points of the Revolutionary War

This well-written, accessible history is a significant contribution to the literature on the American Revolutionary War. Maass’s blend of thorough research, engaging stories, and expert analysis make this book a must, especially for U.S. history readers.

Reading the Waves: A Memoir

Brilliant, unflinching, and written with the same heady, literary sophistication as Yuknavitch’s novels. Compounded by real moments of narrative vulnerability, this memoir is as much an act of dismembering as it is of remembering.
PREMIUM

Owned: How Tech Billionaires on the Right Bought the Loudest Voices on the Left

An incisive analysis of the influence of money and big-tech executives in right-wing media.
PREMIUM

The Community of Nuchi Du Takara (“Life Is the Ultimate Treasure”) in Postwar Okinawa: Local Subjectivity Within and Against Empire

This scholarly work does a good job of indicating the nuances and the conflict between Okinawa and the U.S.-Japan alliance. Recommended for graduate students and readers interested in modern East Asia.
PREMIUM

Crescent Dawn: The Rise of the Ottoman Empire and the Making of the Modern Age

This exhaustive work will find a readership among specialists, as it details key battles and ideological impetuses of important figures. Sheppard also succinctly explains the reasoning behind crucial events during a turning point in European history.
PREMIUM

The Worst Trickster Story Ever Told: Native America, the Supreme Court, and the U.S. Constitution

Blending serious scholarship with a chatty and lively narrative style, this introduction to plenary power within the context of relations between the U.S. and Indigenous peoples will intrigue law students, advocates, and general readers.

Band of Sisters: Madeleine Pauliac, the Women of the Blue Squadron, and Their Daring Rescue Missions in the Last Days of World War II

Using archival records, stories from Maynial’s family, and an interview with the last surviving nurse from the Blue Squadron, this book delivers a gripping, affectionate account of these women’s heroic work. Best for history, gender studies, and human-interest readers.
PREMIUM

Unforgettable Sacrifice: How Black Communities Remembered the Civil War

Green offers a foundational understanding of Black Civil War memory and encourages readers to continue to ask questions and gather more stories before they are further lost to time, thus continuing to dispel misconceptions and misinterpretations. An excellent companion to Levin’s Searching for Black Confederates and Roberts and Kyrtle’s Denmark Vesey’s Garden.
PREMIUM

Counterculture: The Story of America from Bohemia to Hip-Hop

A good introduction to the process of culture making in the 20th century.

Scout Camp: Sex, Death, and Secret Societies Inside the Boy Scouts of America

The lack of books on the Boy Scouts largest summer camp makes this deeply personal, captivating, and accessible title an essential addition to true crime collections.
PREMIUM

Hoodwinked: How Marketers Use the Same Tactics as Cults

A thought-provoking analysis of modern marketing tactics that empowers consumers to ameliorate its effects. This will appeal to social sciences–based critics of contemporary marketing.

Last Seen: The Enduring Search by Formerly Enslaved People To Find Their Lost Families

Based on a unique set of sources, this heart-wrenching work should be read by all focused on enslavement studies as well as American and Civil War history.

Original Sins: The (Mis)education of Black and Native Children and the Construction of American Racism

Ewing’s profound work is a must read for politicians, school board members, education administrators, and teachers. It would also be an excellent addition to professional development and teacher education programs.

Bibliophobia: A Memoir

Vulnerable yet acerbic, this moving interrogation of the stories that helped Chihaya survive in a predominantly white environment validates the real and raw ways in which books shape people’s internal and external identities in personal, political, psychological, and social ways.

Kinda Korean: Stories from an American Life

A conversation-generating memoir. Give to readers who enjoyed I’m Glad My Mom Died by Jennette McCurdy or Real Americans by Rachel Khong.

Calling In: How To Start Making Change with Those You’d Rather Cancel

This is a highly recommended, necessary read for anyone who finds themself grating against those with different political beliefs. Ross’s book has plenty of potential for discussions and healing relations between friends and family and maybe even strangers too.

The Battle of Manila: Poisoned Victory in the Pacific War

Taking a whole-army approach, Sarantakes describes the contributions of all units and levels of command, along with discussions of unit mobility, intelligence, and tactics. This strategy makes for a detailed and comprehensive treatment of a generally under-researched but crucial battle. This deeply researched and well-written work will certainly be enjoyed by readers of World War II history.

The Age of Choice: A History of Freedom in Modern Life

This first-rate study of choice and freedom will appeal to most history lovers.

The Witch Studies Reader

An illuminating and vibrant collection of work for scholars of women’s and queer studies, as well as readers interested in women’s empowerment, paganism, and witchcraft.
PREMIUM

The Home Child

A powerful book (winner of Britain’s Writers’ Prize for Poetry in 2023, as well as the Writers’ Prize for overall Book of the Year) that will linger with readers long after the last word.
PREMIUM

Don Drysdale: Up and In; The Life of a Dodgers Legend

This is definitely a book for readers familiar with Drysdale and fans of baseball. It’s a good story about a time gone by.
PREMIUM

From the Shadow of the Blues: My Story of Music, Addiction, and Redemption

Hooker has survived more in his life than most people, and fans of his music and the blues will appreciate learning his story.

The Anthology of Black Mountain College Poetry

Well thought-out, the selections in this anthology beautifully introduce readers to this special college and to poets deserving of high praise and appreciation.

Women Architects at Work: Making American Modernism

This book models the research and scholarship needed to more fully represent women in the history of architecture. The result is a richer story of both women in architecture and modernism in the United States.
PREMIUM

Jane Austen’s Garden: A Botanical Tour of the Classic Novels

This is a lovely book that educates and offers beauty. Recommended for plant lovers and Austen aficionados.

‘The Wire’: A Cultural History

This timely retrospective on inner city reality as a cultural phenomenon will appeal to media scholars and crime show fans.
PREMIUM

Hollywood’s Unofficial Film Corps: American Jewish Moviemakers and the War Effort

Like physical combat veterans, many on the front lines in Hollywood subsequently seldom talked about their efforts, which makes this book valuable.
PREMIUM

I’m Not Your Muse: Uncovering the Overshadowed Brilliance of Women Artists & Visionaries

This provides a delightful touching off point that is sure to pique curiosity and initiate a deeper dive by readers.
PREMIUM

Lloyd Kaufman: Interviews

Kaufman’s shtick gets repetitive, but readers will gain insight into the world of no-budget cinema.
PREMIUM

Fearless and Free: A Memoir

This dialogue with Baker revels in her poetic and often humorous way of speaking. Pair with Chris Chase and Jean-Claude Baker’s authoritative biography Josephine Baker: The Hungry Heart.
PREMIUM

Black Woman Grief: A Guide to Hope and Wholeness

This excellent book skillfully showcases Smith’s method for identifying and healing from grief and finding wholeness. It can be read individually or as a study group. Each chapter opens with a quote by an accomplished Black woman, covers an issue that Black women face, infuses God’s Word, provides solutions, and ends with an encouraging letter to Black women.

The Secret Public: How Music Moved Queer Culture from the Margins to the Mainstream

This title is not merely essential for any collection on popular music or queer history. Savage’s ability to turn a wealth of information into a compellingly readable narrative should make this volume of interest to readers of all stripes.
PREMIUM

Lit Up with Love: Becoming Good-News People to a Gospel-Starved World

This work can easily be used for individual and ministry training. In each chapter, specific characteristics of God are explained and demonstrated, followed by a listing of holy habits, reflection questions, and prayers.
PREMIUM

Easter: The Season of the Resurrection of Jesus

A learned, heady Easter reflection.
PREMIUM

Pink: The History of a Color

A profusely illustrated in-depth history of interest to students of art and art history.

Jesus Wept: Seven Popes and the Battle for the Soul of the Catholic Church

Readers interested in the Catholic Church and religious history will enjoy this insightful work. Contributions from top theologians about the roles that various women played in papal households add considerable depth and detail to the stories of the popes.
PREMIUM

Healing Wounds: The 2025 Lent Book

Catholic readers celebrating Lent will appreciate Varden’s hopeful insights and distinctive Cistercian perspective on the passion of Christ. The book is designed and billed as a 2025 Lenten devotion, but it would be suitable for using other years or even outside of Lent, especially for people experiencing illnesses or chronic pain or readers interested in hymns.

Vatican Spies: From the Second World War to Pope Francis

Incorporating findings from recently released research and documents, this book reads like a fascinating thriller.
PREMIUM

Black Woods, Blue Sky

Ivey takes readers on an emotional literary journey that includes touches of magic woven throughout and the question of whether love is enough to change someone. Recommended for book discussion picks.
PREMIUM

A Poisoner’s Tale

Kemp’s deeply researched story pulls in readers, but its narrator stretches the bounds of sympathy and credulity.
PREMIUM

Casualties of Truth

Francis-Sharma (Book of the Little Axe) has written a timely and compelling story that will please discerning readers.

Show Don’t Tell: Stories

There isn’t space enough to highlight each of Sittenfeld’s stories, all of which are compelling, relatable, and worthy.
PREMIUM

She’s a Lamb!

For readers who enjoy dark, uncomfortable humor and tales of mental spiraling.
PREMIUM

The Sirens

Hart’s second novel (after Weyward) weaves a lyrical story, intricately blending family dynamics with the magic of folklore. For fans of family relationship stories with elements of magical realism, such as the novels of Sarah Addison Allen.

Beach Vibes

Multi-published Mallery is at her best here. This is a fast read that’s sure to delight her fans and provoke discussion for book clubs.
PREMIUM

Elegy, Southwest

Metaphors abound in Watts’s fiction, but this work solemnly ponders whether accepting negation opens up alternative paths toward the future. Her novel movingly covers multitudinous forms of grief: ecological, political, and familial.

Tough Luck

Full of humor, heart, and hope, this novel is a delight for anyone looking for a Western with a little less grit and a little more gentleness. Readers who like happy endings to their adventures will be drawn in by evocative period details, engaging characters, and strong narrative voice.
PREMIUM

Happy Land

This is a lyrical and unique work of historical fiction. The Kingdom is based on a real place about which readers will want to know more after reading Perkins-Valdez’s novel. Fans of hidden-history narratives will enjoy her hopeful, empowering tale.
PREMIUM

Loca

With themes of relationships, love, and family, this tale will resonate with readers who have faced hardships and who have had to search for and embrace their identity. A welcome addition to collections.
PREMIUM

Emma: 200th-Anniversary Annotated Edition (Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition)

This often less-read novel, here with annotations by Wells (English, Goucher Coll.), holds many of the strong pleasures of Austen, most centrally her keen characterizations and social observations.

To Sicily with Love

Book clubs will enjoy this wonderful novel about family, friendship and inner strength. It is a must-read for those who like the work of Kristin Hannah and Jojo Moyes.
PREMIUM

Audition

This sleek, provocative novel is sure to confound readers; a must for literary collections and for book club discussions.
PREMIUM

Hot Air

In her latest, Dermansky (Hurricane Girl) distills a potent brew from the sad consequences of power disparities among people. No arena of domestic human emotions is safe from her biting wit and analysis. Mother-daughter, employer-worker, husband-wife, rich-poor conflicts: all get their moment in the spotlight. It’s a laugh-till-you cry experience that will send readers to Dermansky’s backlist for more.
PREMIUM

Persuasion

Redemptive, heartrending, and emotionally powerful, this finely crafted, deeply observant novel is among the treasures of 19th-century British fiction.

The Women on Platform Two

Based upon a little-known true event, this haunting and emotional story from pseudonymous Anthony, who has published women’s fiction under another name, could not be timelier. Women in the United States are not the only ones who must fight to protect personal rights, and this powerful novel will remind readers of the fragility of those freedoms.

A Girl Within a Girl Within a Girl

This debut is a beautiful, if sometimes harrowing exploration of one woman’s journey, not only from one country to another but through the pain and trauma of unimaginable childhood abuse to a life built by her own grit and determination.
PREMIUM

The Burning Heart of the World

This is a fast-moving, relatable story that would be a good addition to a historical fiction section or fiction of special interest to women. Fans of Lisa Wingate and Chris Bohjalian will also enjoy.

Wild Dark Shore

As lush as it is taut with tension, this novel is filled with both the joys and ravages of nature.

What Is Wrong with You?

In the end, the plot does not matter, really; what makes Rudnick’s book so memorable are the well-drawn friendships among characters, their allegiance to one another, and a surprisingly touching reflection on love, trust, and the passage of time.
PREMIUM

Jane and Dan at the End of the World

Though the set-up is stronger than the landing, getting there is tons of fun in this fast-paced novel.
PREMIUM

Pride and Prejudice

Quick-moving, clever, and interrogative, Austen’s popular love story, edited by the late literary scholar Kinsley and with a new introduction by Christina Lupton (English, Univ. of Warwick), is far more than a quest for a happily-ever-after.

Code Word Romance

A sharply written novel with surprise comedic twists. Readers will enjoy this tale of two ex-lovers who are reunited by espionage and who ultimately find true love as they race through the beautiful streets of Italy, trying to stay alive.
PREMIUM

Story of My Life

The excellent writing in Score’s (“Knockemout” series) latest small-town romance pulls readers into Hazel’s new life, featuring snarky humor, lots of banter, and hot chemistry between the well-developed protagonists. Highly recommended.

Crossing Paths

Ruggle’s sequel to The Scenic Route (and her fourth novel featuring the Pax sisters) is a delight for fans of romantic suspense who also appreciate a sprinkle of humor. The epilogue, featuring an unexpected discovery by the fifth Pax sister, is sure to keep readers anxious for the next book.
PREMIUM

Just Our Luck

Williams (Technically Yours) writes a sexy fake-dating romance with charm, featuring a protagonist navigating the challenges of family expectations and love.
PREMIUM

Pole Position

A solid enemies-to-lovers tale with a racing twist.
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