Founding Faith by Steven Waldman

Americans need to know their history. This informative and easy to read book should be helpful.
Cherry Hill Library Patron KM

The Political Mind by George Lakoff

Thought provoking and mind expanding.
Cherry Hill Library Patron KM

Tell No One by Harlan Coben

Fast and fun mystery–great for the beach or pool.
Cherry Hill Library Patron KM

Guilty by Karen Robards

After an exciting first chapter that is rather detailed, this novel then settles into an interesting mystery tale. The setting is Philadelphia which makes it easy to read. A good summer beach read.
Cherry Hill Library Patron BD

Forward From Here by Reeve Lindberg

An interesting journal by the youngest of the “American children” of Charles and Anne Lindbergh. Her journal is most interesting when in the final chapters it deals with the stories of the “other Lindbergh children.”
Cherry Hill Library Patron BD

Vineyard Chill by Philip Craig

An enjoyable read. As mystery stories can sometimes be violent, it is nice to read one that isn’t, plus who can beat Martha’s Vineyard as a background?
Cherry Hill Library Patron BD

Winter Wheat by Mildred Walker

A poignant tale set on a Montana dryland wheat farm in 1940 and 1941. Ellen Webb loves life on her family’s remote farm, but then she heads to college and falls in love with a man from the city. He visits her at home, doesn’t like what he sees, and breaks her heart. She must [...]

The Phony Marine by Jim Lehrer

An unremarkable clothing salesman in his fifties impulsively buys a Silver Star medal online and re-invents his life as a former hero marine. Acts of real heroism follow as well as the entanglements of living a lie. Not bad!
Cherry Hill Library Patron KD

The Last Lecture by Randy Pausch

A Carnegie-Mellon professor of computer design dying of pancreatic cancer offers us his insights on life. I liked how he explained that he won the parent lottery-which he surely did! I found myself agreeing with much that he said.
Cherry Hill Library Patron KD

The Price of Blood by Declan Hughes

‘Tis not the Eire of the Irish Tenors or Tommy Makem & the Clancy Brothers. His private eye, Ed Loy, gets caught up in investigating the disappearance of a famous jockey, which leads to a “family’s” secrets AND multiple murders. Hughes has a gift of language, humor, and imagination.
Cherry Hill Library Patron WB