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            <![CDATA[ Frontlist Book | Here Are the 12 New Books You Should Read in August ]]>
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            <![CDATA[ https://www.frontlist.in/public/frontlist-book-here-are-the-12-new-books-you-should-read-in-august ]]>
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            <![CDATA[ hat can history teach us about who we are today? It’s a question of enormous scope, but one that the authors of this month’s best books tackle with honesty and care. In her highly anticipated book <em>Caste</em>, journalist Isabel Wilkerson outlines a new framework to understand social hierarchy in the United States. In their twisty novels, Daisy Johnson and Charlotte McConaghy examine what makes people run away from the lives they once led. And in a sweeping collection of Native poetry, the voices of more than 160 poets demonstrate the evolution of Native literature. These books, among several others, pose crucial questions about how the past shapes the present.
<h1><strong>Here, the 12 new books to read in August. </strong></h1>
<h2><b><i>The Death of Vivek Oji</i></b><b>, Akwaeke Emezi (Aug. 4)</b></h2>
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The first chapter of Akwaeke Emezi’s latest novel contains just one sentence: “They burned down the market on the day Vivek Oji died.” From there, the story moves forward and backward in time, unveiling the titular character’s coming-of-age in Nigeria, where his family struggled to accept who he wanted to be. In chapters that flip between various voices in Vivek’s life, including Vivek’s own, Emezi dissects how a community can grieve a person they never truly understood.

<strong>Buy Now:</strong> <em>The Death of Vivek Oji </em>on <a href=https://bookshop.org/a/4973/9780525541608 target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Bookshop</a> | <a href=https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0525541608/ref=as_li_qf_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=time-books-20&amp;creative=9325&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;creativeASIN=0525541608&amp;linkId=3ef1126b8166e2d2bc4b6054a9b90a85 target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Amazon</a>
<h2><b><i>The Disaster Tourist</i></b><b>, Yun Ko-Eun (Aug. 4)</b></h2>
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After being sexually assaulted by her colleague, Yona Ko wants to leave Jungle, the travel agency where they both work. But when she tries to resign, she’s presented with an intriguing offer: a paid trip to one of Jungle’s destinations. But Jungle isn’t a normal travel agency—they specialize in disaster tourism, building itineraries in areas once hit by tsunamis, hurricanes and more. <i>The Disaster Tourist </i>follows Yona as she embarks on an increasingly strange and thrilling trip to the island of Mui, where she discovers the very dark sides of the tourism industry.

<strong>Buy Now:</strong> <em>The Disaster Tourist </em>on <a href=https://bookshop.org/a/4973/9781640094161 target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Bookshop</a> | <a href=https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1640094164/ref=as_li_qf_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=time-books-20&amp;creative=9325&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;creativeASIN=1640094164&amp;linkId=1e64bed04d6f17abd5c820c81d810553 target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Amazon</a>
<h2><b><i>Migrations</i></b><b>, Charlotte McConaghy (Aug. 4)</b></h2>
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Franny Stone has just arrived in Greenland, and she’s on a mission: to track the last migration of the Arctic tern. The 30-something from Galway talks her way onto a fishing boat and begins a dangerous journey at sea. Set in a world eerily similar to our own, <i>Migrations </i>is a bleak look into a future where wildlife is disappearing at a rapid rate, leaving Franny desperate to chase the terns before they’re gone for good. But why that bird? In uncovering the answer, McConaghy paints a gutting portrait of a woman worn down by a world she never quite fit into.

<strong>Buy Now:</strong> <em>Migrations </em>on <a href=https://bookshop.org/a/4973/9781250204028 target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Bookshop</a> | <a href=https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/125020402X/ref=as_li_qf_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=time-books-20&amp;creative=9325&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;creativeASIN=125020402X&amp;linkId=33a48518a50da4df5c17d416c1840be4 target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Amazon</a>
<h2><b><i>Love After Love</i></b><b>, Ingrid Persaud (Aug. 4)</b></h2>
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In the years that follow the death of her abusive husband, Betty Ramdin opens up her home to her colleague Mr. Chetan. The two live together platonically and raise Betty’s son Solo, rebuilding a family unit that was once shattered. But this new unit falls apart when Solo discovers a secret from his mother’s past—one that drives him to flee their home in Trinidad for New York. Written in Trinidadian dialect, Ingrid Persaud’s bruising debut delves into the heartbreaks that accompany everyday life, culminating in a powerful examination of what it means to be part of a family.

<strong>Buy Now:</strong> <em>Love After Love </em>on <a href=https://bookshop.org/a/4973/9780593157565 target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Bookshop</a> | <a href=https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0593157567/ref=as_li_qf_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=time-books-20&amp;creative=9325&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;creativeASIN=0593157567&amp;linkId=81ac9951f6b018346453080cf9fefd17 target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Amazon</a>
<h2><b><i>Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents</i></b><b>, Isabel Wilkerson (Aug. 4)</b></h2>
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The latest book from Pulitzer Prize-winning author Isabel Wilkerson focuses on the formation of social hierarchy in the United States by exploring the country’s unspoken caste system. Wilkerson provides a masterful framework for understanding American inequality, building on more than a decade of research, to illuminate the divisions that occur in the United States, widening the scope beyond race and class. In highlighting the ways the caste systems of America, India and Nazi Germany are all connected, Wilkerson forces her readers to reevaluate the systems into which people are born.

<strong>Buy Now:</strong> <em>Caste </em>on <a href=https://bookshop.org/a/4973/9780593230251 target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Bookshop</a> | <a href=https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0593230256/ref=as_li_qf_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=time-books-20&amp;creative=9325&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;creativeASIN=0593230256&amp;linkId=8d3db74a0c1b9c9d8ca543221d87e5de target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Amazon</a>
<h2><b><i>Belabored: A Vindication of the Rights of Pregnant Women</i></b><b>, Lyz Lenz (Aug. 11)</b></h2>
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Writer and editor Lyz Lenz wants us to start treating pregnant women differently. In her searing new book, she analyzes why it’s so difficult to be pregnant in America, blending together historical research, feminist theory and her own experiences as an expectant parent. She asks us to consider our definitions of pregnancy and motherhood, the imagery that they conjure and the myths that need debunking. In a voice full of humor, passion and urgency, Lenz asks that women be the ones making decisions about their bodies.

<strong>Buy Now: </strong><em>Belabored </em>on <a href=https://bookshop.org/a/4973/9781541762831 target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Bookshop</a> | <a href=https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1541762835/ref=as_li_qf_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=time-books-20&amp;creative=9325&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;creativeASIN=1541762835&amp;linkId=4da310c5004dd1524a00db8bf096ebcc target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Amazon</a>
<h2><b><i>A House Is a Body: Stories</i></b><b>, Shruti Swamy (Aug. 11)</b></h2>
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In her debut collection, Shruti Swami explores lust, loss and loneliness through 12 short stories set in the United States and India. The characters in <i>A House Is a Body </i>navigate disasters on small and large scales: in one story a man wrestles with grief over his wife’s death as he continues to raise their child, in another a woman is trapped in her home as a nearby wildfire picks up speed. Throughout, Swamy connects the narratives through her clean prose, punctuating moments both surreal and eerily realistic.

<strong>Buy Now:</strong> <em>A House Is a Body </em>on <a href=https://bookshop.org/a/4973/9781616209896 target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Bookshop</a> | <a href=https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1616209895/ref=as_li_qf_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=time-books-20&amp;creative=9325&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;creativeASIN=1616209895&amp;linkId=28bb5f0d433511c3e29076c786bd6c40 target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Amazon</a>
<h2><b><i>When the Light of the World Was Subdued, Our Songs Came Through: A Norton Anthology of Native Nations Poetry</i></b><b>, Joy Harjo (editor)(Aug. 25)</b></h2>
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More than 160 poets from almost 100 Indigenous nations comprise this comprehensive anthology, which showcases poetry that span centuries. The five sections of the collection represent the different geographical regions of the United States, and include a range of voices, from Eleazar, a 17th-century student at Harvard, to contemporary poets like Tommy Pico and Layli Long Soldier. The anthology, edited by U.S. Poet Laureate Joy Harjo, celebrates the power of Native literature and underlines the impact it has had on American poetry.

<strong>Buy Now: </strong><em>When the Light of the World Was Subdued, Our Songs Came Through </em>on <a href=https://bookshop.org/a/4973/9780393356809 target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Bookshop</a> | <a href=https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0393356809/ref=as_li_qf_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=time-books-20&amp;creative=9325&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;creativeASIN=0393356809&amp;linkId=445822f64ae077c9193eed8f25d10941 target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Amazon</a>
<h2><b><i>Sisters</i></b><b>, Daisy Johnson (Aug. 25)</b></h2>
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Can sisters ever be too close? It’s the question at the core of Daisy Johnson’s unsettling new novel, which traces the plight of teenage sisters July and September. The girls recently moved with their mother to a remote cottage on the coast after fleeing their home in Oxford. In unraveling exactly what the sisters are running away from, Johnson crafts an aching thriller about the dangers of loving too intensely.

<strong>Buy Now:</strong> <em>Sisters </em>on <a href=https://bookshop.org/a/4973/9780593188958 target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Bookshop</a> | <a href=https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0593188950/ref=as_li_qf_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=time-books-20&amp;creative=9325&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;creativeASIN=0593188950&amp;linkId=82d94dfacd7fd6070c3584c355c7c0fb target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Amazon</a>
<h2><b><i>Vesper Flights</i></b><b>, Helen Macdonald (Aug. 25)</b></h2>
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In her 2015 memoir <i>H is for Hawk</i>, naturalist Helen Macdonald reflected on how her relationship with a goshawk helped her grieve her father’s death. In her new collection <i>Vesper Flights</i>, Macdonald again grapples with feelings of loss and love and relates them to wildlife. In essays both new and old, Macdonald makes stunning observations about the animals that surround us, from cranes in Hungary to songbirds in New York City, revealing what these creatures can teach us about ourselves.

<strong>Buy Now: </strong><em>Vesper Flights </em>on <a href=https://bookshop.org/a/4973/9780802128812 target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Bookshop</a> | <a href=https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0802128815/ref=as_li_qf_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=time-books-20&amp;creative=9325&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;creativeASIN=0802128815&amp;linkId=aa07b371998a0a428eb10a41dbd6fd92 target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Amazon</a>
<h2><b><i>Summer</i></b><b>, Ali Smith (Aug. 25)</b></h2>
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Like its predecessors, the fourth and final installment of Ali Smith’s beloved Seasonal Quartet series is anchored in the very real tensions of our present moment. Set against the backdrop of the coronavirus pandemic, <i>Summer </i>dives into our current sociopolitical landscape through the story of siblings Sacha and Robert. As the duo attempts to understand their place in the world, Smith weaves in characters from past books and tackles issues like immigration and Brexit.

<strong>Buy Now: </strong><em>Summer </em>on <a href=https://bookshop.org/a/4973/9781101870792 target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Bookshop</a> | <a href=https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1101870796/ref=as_li_qf_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=time-books-20&amp;creative=9325&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;creativeASIN=1101870796&amp;linkId=836e73c86ce05a59134793d4ec85cf9e target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Amazon</a>
<h2><b><em>Winter Counts</em>, David Heska Wanbli Weiden (Aug. 25)</b></h2>
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At the center of David Heska Wanbli Weiden’s crime thriller is Virgil Wounded Horse, the local enforcer on the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota. Though he’s used to doling out punishments in his community, things get personal when his nephew overdoses on heroin. In <i>Winter Counts</i>, Virgil becomes obsessed with figuring out how the drugs got into the reservation, leading him on a gripping journey to Denver with his ex-girlfriend. ]]>
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        <pubDate>Sat, 08 01, 2020 07:33 am</pubDate>
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            <title>
                <![CDATA[ Frontlist Book | Here Are the 12 New Books You Should Read in August ]]>
            </title>
            <link><![CDATA[ https://www.frontlist.in/public/frontlist-book-here-are-the-12-new-books-you-should-read-in-august ]]></link>
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                <![CDATA[ hat can history teach us about who we are today? It’s a question of enormous scope, but one that the authors of this month’s best books tackle with honesty and care. In her highly anticipated book <em>Caste</em>, journalist Isabel Wilkerson outlines a new framework to understand social hierarchy in the United States. In their twisty novels, Daisy Johnson and Charlotte McConaghy examine what makes people run away from the lives they once led. And in a sweeping collection of Native poetry, the voices of more than 160 poets demonstrate the evolution of Native literature. These books, among several others, pose crucial questions about how the past shapes the present.
<h1><strong>Here, the 12 new books to read in August. </strong></h1>
<h2><b><i>The Death of Vivek Oji</i></b><b>, Akwaeke Emezi (Aug. 4)</b></h2>
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The first chapter of Akwaeke Emezi’s latest novel contains just one sentence: “They burned down the market on the day Vivek Oji died.” From there, the story moves forward and backward in time, unveiling the titular character’s coming-of-age in Nigeria, where his family struggled to accept who he wanted to be. In chapters that flip between various voices in Vivek’s life, including Vivek’s own, Emezi dissects how a community can grieve a person they never truly understood.

<strong>Buy Now:</strong> <em>The Death of Vivek Oji </em>on <a href=https://bookshop.org/a/4973/9780525541608 target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Bookshop</a> | <a href=https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0525541608/ref=as_li_qf_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=time-books-20&amp;creative=9325&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;creativeASIN=0525541608&amp;linkId=3ef1126b8166e2d2bc4b6054a9b90a85 target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Amazon</a>
<h2><b><i>The Disaster Tourist</i></b><b>, Yun Ko-Eun (Aug. 4)</b></h2>
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After being sexually assaulted by her colleague, Yona Ko wants to leave Jungle, the travel agency where they both work. But when she tries to resign, she’s presented with an intriguing offer: a paid trip to one of Jungle’s destinations. But Jungle isn’t a normal travel agency—they specialize in disaster tourism, building itineraries in areas once hit by tsunamis, hurricanes and more. <i>The Disaster Tourist </i>follows Yona as she embarks on an increasingly strange and thrilling trip to the island of Mui, where she discovers the very dark sides of the tourism industry.

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<h2><b><i>Migrations</i></b><b>, Charlotte McConaghy (Aug. 4)</b></h2>
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Franny Stone has just arrived in Greenland, and she’s on a mission: to track the last migration of the Arctic tern. The 30-something from Galway talks her way onto a fishing boat and begins a dangerous journey at sea. Set in a world eerily similar to our own, <i>Migrations </i>is a bleak look into a future where wildlife is disappearing at a rapid rate, leaving Franny desperate to chase the terns before they’re gone for good. But why that bird? In uncovering the answer, McConaghy paints a gutting portrait of a woman worn down by a world she never quite fit into.

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<h2><b><i>Love After Love</i></b><b>, Ingrid Persaud (Aug. 4)</b></h2>
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In the years that follow the death of her abusive husband, Betty Ramdin opens up her home to her colleague Mr. Chetan. The two live together platonically and raise Betty’s son Solo, rebuilding a family unit that was once shattered. But this new unit falls apart when Solo discovers a secret from his mother’s past—one that drives him to flee their home in Trinidad for New York. Written in Trinidadian dialect, Ingrid Persaud’s bruising debut delves into the heartbreaks that accompany everyday life, culminating in a powerful examination of what it means to be part of a family.

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<h2><b><i>Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents</i></b><b>, Isabel Wilkerson (Aug. 4)</b></h2>
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The latest book from Pulitzer Prize-winning author Isabel Wilkerson focuses on the formation of social hierarchy in the United States by exploring the country’s unspoken caste system. Wilkerson provides a masterful framework for understanding American inequality, building on more than a decade of research, to illuminate the divisions that occur in the United States, widening the scope beyond race and class. In highlighting the ways the caste systems of America, India and Nazi Germany are all connected, Wilkerson forces her readers to reevaluate the systems into which people are born.

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<h2><b><i>Belabored: A Vindication of the Rights of Pregnant Women</i></b><b>, Lyz Lenz (Aug. 11)</b></h2>
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Writer and editor Lyz Lenz wants us to start treating pregnant women differently. In her searing new book, she analyzes why it’s so difficult to be pregnant in America, blending together historical research, feminist theory and her own experiences as an expectant parent. She asks us to consider our definitions of pregnancy and motherhood, the imagery that they conjure and the myths that need debunking. In a voice full of humor, passion and urgency, Lenz asks that women be the ones making decisions about their bodies.

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<h2><b><i>A House Is a Body: Stories</i></b><b>, Shruti Swamy (Aug. 11)</b></h2>
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In her debut collection, Shruti Swami explores lust, loss and loneliness through 12 short stories set in the United States and India. The characters in <i>A House Is a Body </i>navigate disasters on small and large scales: in one story a man wrestles with grief over his wife’s death as he continues to raise their child, in another a woman is trapped in her home as a nearby wildfire picks up speed. Throughout, Swamy connects the narratives through her clean prose, punctuating moments both surreal and eerily realistic.

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<h2><b><i>When the Light of the World Was Subdued, Our Songs Came Through: A Norton Anthology of Native Nations Poetry</i></b><b>, Joy Harjo (editor)(Aug. 25)</b></h2>
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More than 160 poets from almost 100 Indigenous nations comprise this comprehensive anthology, which showcases poetry that span centuries. The five sections of the collection represent the different geographical regions of the United States, and include a range of voices, from Eleazar, a 17th-century student at Harvard, to contemporary poets like Tommy Pico and Layli Long Soldier. The anthology, edited by U.S. Poet Laureate Joy Harjo, celebrates the power of Native literature and underlines the impact it has had on American poetry.

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<h2><b><i>Sisters</i></b><b>, Daisy Johnson (Aug. 25)</b></h2>
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Can sisters ever be too close? It’s the question at the core of Daisy Johnson’s unsettling new novel, which traces the plight of teenage sisters July and September. The girls recently moved with their mother to a remote cottage on the coast after fleeing their home in Oxford. In unraveling exactly what the sisters are running away from, Johnson crafts an aching thriller about the dangers of loving too intensely.

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<h2><b><i>Vesper Flights</i></b><b>, Helen Macdonald (Aug. 25)</b></h2>
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In her 2015 memoir <i>H is for Hawk</i>, naturalist Helen Macdonald reflected on how her relationship with a goshawk helped her grieve her father’s death. In her new collection <i>Vesper Flights</i>, Macdonald again grapples with feelings of loss and love and relates them to wildlife. In essays both new and old, Macdonald makes stunning observations about the animals that surround us, from cranes in Hungary to songbirds in New York City, revealing what these creatures can teach us about ourselves.

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<h2><b><i>Summer</i></b><b>, Ali Smith (Aug. 25)</b></h2>
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Like its predecessors, the fourth and final installment of Ali Smith’s beloved Seasonal Quartet series is anchored in the very real tensions of our present moment. Set against the backdrop of the coronavirus pandemic, <i>Summer </i>dives into our current sociopolitical landscape through the story of siblings Sacha and Robert. As the duo attempts to understand their place in the world, Smith weaves in characters from past books and tackles issues like immigration and Brexit.

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<h2><b><em>Winter Counts</em>, David Heska Wanbli Weiden (Aug. 25)</b></h2>
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At the center of David Heska Wanbli Weiden’s crime thriller is Virgil Wounded Horse, the local enforcer on the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota. Though he’s used to doling out punishments in his community, things get personal when his nephew overdoses on heroin. In <i>Winter Counts</i>, Virgil becomes obsessed with figuring out how the drugs got into the reservation, leading him on a gripping journey to Denver with his ex-girlfriend. ]]>
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                <![CDATA[ Frontlist ]]>
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            <pubDate>Sat, 08 01, 2020 07:33 am</pubDate>
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