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Here Are the 15 New Books You Should Read in April


Here Are the 15 New Books You Should Read in April
Time
3 days ago
© Provided by Time
The best new books arriving in April tackle a wide range of subjects, from a sweeping anthology that illuminates the history of Black farmers in the United States to the firsthand account of an EMT in New York City. This month welcomes the return of award-winning authors like Jhumpa Lahiri and Haruki Murakami as well as the first novels from Morgan Jerkins and JoAnne Tompkins. Here, the best books to read in April.
We Are Each Other’s Harvest: Celebrating African American Farmers, Land, and Legacy, Natalie Baszile (April 6) ....

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10 books that will bring color to a drab winter


By Laurie Hertzel, Star Tribune
In the middle of winter, people start craving color. Here are 10 books to remind us that eventually our landscape will be filled with color again.
Reading the rainbow
Published in 1850, the novel is set in Puritan America.
It’s the story of Hester Prynne, who conceives a child out of wedlock and is forced to wear the scarlet “A” for adultery on her clothing.
‘A Study in Scarlet’ by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
The first Sherlock Holmes novel.
Originally published in 1887, the mystery revolves around the discovery of a corpse in a London house with the word “Rache” scrawled in blood nearby. ....

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2021 Reading List: Books by Latinos & Latinas You Should Read


If 2021 is shaping up to be anything like 2020, we’re looking at a
lot more time with only ourselves for company. Luckily, Latine authors are up for the challenge of helping to fill that time. From a novel-in-verse about maybe falling in love with Selena’s ghost to a memoir about growing up queer and biracial in rural Indiana, 2021 promises us a dizzying variety of novels, memoirs, and poetry to carry us through the remaining lock-in.
Here are 10 books coming out (mostly) in the first half of 2021, to keep you company while you wait for your vaccine:
Marcos Gonsalez,
Pedro’s Theory: Reimagining the Promised Land  ....

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Pick up these paperbacks to fill up winter days


Here are a half-dozen recommended paperbacks, if your bedside table is currently bare.
‘The Magical Language of Others’ by E.J. Koh
Seattle author Koh’s intergenerational memoir, a recent winner of a Pacific Northwest Book Award from the Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association, was inspired by letters written to Koh in Korean by her mother, who left her children behind in California in order to return to South Korea for work.
A reviewer for the San Francisco Chronicle described the book as “a wonder: a challenging and deep meditation on how wounds of the past and present inform our relationship with those outside of us, which is to say, everyone.”  ....

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