Published: 2017
Call Number: 648.8
Format: Books
Summary: Tackle your biggest storage problems with our all-new organization book, The Family Handyman Ultimate Storage Solutions. Inside you'll discover 450+ clever projects & tips that will help you manage the mess in one weekend or less! Learn how to customize a garage storage system. De-clutter your entryway. Optimize kitchen storage. Or, build the ultimate garden shed. Designed for every level of do-it-yourselfer, we've included a 54-page DIY skills tutorial that shows you how to correctly use tools and complete project tasks. And a special section on Hacks and Shortcuts!
Author: Hoover, Colleen author.
Published: 2015 2014
Call Number: F HOOVER
Format: Books
Summary: When Warren becomes roommates with cold and calculating Bridgette, tempers flare, but Warren is intent on turning her passionate antagonism into passionate love. Colleen Hoover, the New York Times bestselling author of Maybe Someday, brilliantly brings to life the story of the wonderfully hilarious and charismatic Warren in a new novella, Maybe Not. When Warren has the opportunity to live with a female roommate, he instantly agrees. It could be an exciting change. Or maybe not. Especially when that roommate is the cold and seemingly calculating Bridgette. Tensions run high and tempers flare as the two can hardly stand to be in the same room together. But Warren has a theory about Bridgette: anyone who can hate with that much passion should also have the capability to love with that much passion. And he wants to be the one to test this theory. Will Bridgette find it in herself to warm her heart to Warren and finally learn to love? Maybe. Maybe not.
Author: Francis, John.
Published: 2008 2005
Call Number: B FRANCIS
Format: Books
Suggested for ages 5 and older. Registration required. Come meet up with other LEGO enthusiasts and build your own LEGO creations. All materials provided. All programs subject to change or cancellation.
The acclaimed writers are communing once again in productions of “Baldwin and Buckley at Cambridge” and “A Raisin in the Sun” at the Public Theater.
The writer, celebrated for his short stories, discusses his 2017 debut novel, and the journalist Patrick Radden Keefe talks about “Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland.”
The writer, celebrated for his short stories, discusses his 2017 debut novel, and the journalist Patrick Radden Keefe talks about “Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland.”
In “Demon Copperhead,” Barbara Kingsolver reimagines “David Copperfield” as a tale set in Southern Appalachia, and brings humanity and humor to a region and people who have long endured exploitation and condescension.
Anthony Sattin, the author of a new book on nomadic groups, discusses how contemporary travelers and digital nomads can learn a few things from traditional cultures.
The Pulitzer-winning novelist uses “The Passenger” and “Stella Maris,” his first novels in 16 years, to explore math and physics, fields that have long fascinated him.
A passage from Cormac McCarthy’s first novel since his Pulitzer Prize-winning 2006 book “The Road.”
Seeming to contain everything, Lucy Ives’s “Life Is Everywhere” literalizes Ursula K. Le Guin’s “carrier bag” theory of fiction.
Seeming to contain everything, Lucy Ives’s “Life Is Everywhere” literalizes Ursula K. Le Guin’s “carrier bag” theory of fiction.
New books about language, fairy tales and the paths we don’t pursue.
The stories in Samanta Schweblin’s “Seven Empty Houses,” a finalist for the National Book Award in translated literature, tear down the delicate scaffolding of home.
New books about language, fairy tales and the paths we don’t pursue.
The stories in Samanta Schweblin’s “Seven Empty Houses,” a finalist for the National Book Award in translated literature, tear down the delicate scaffolding of home.
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
That the author of “The Canterbury Tales” had been accused of rape was long a staple of Chaucer studies. But scholars now suggest it was based on a misreading of court papers from 1380.
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