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Check out this month's top picks, with short synopses provided by Amazon's book editor, Erin Kodicek.
Winter's arrival is looming, but it's not all grey and dismal. While low temperatures bring gloom for many, there's something about frosty air that makes reading all-the-more cozy. As a chronically freezing person, I live to enjoy a good book under a mountain of quilts. Add a sheet mask to the mix, and I'm golden.
If you're looking to indulge in some new literature, check out this month's book selection below. And if you plan to create a blanket-mountain of your own, we got you covered.
Captions have been provided by Erin Kodicek, editor of books and Kindle at Amazon.
In this fantastical ode to storytelling, the bestselling author of Night Circus takes us where pirates lurk and doors lead forward and backward in time, where crowded ballrooms collapse into oceans, and a young man must piece together clues to uncover and protect his life story.
In this spare supernatural thriller set in Shanghai, executive Zhang Guo Xing encounters a beguiling woman at a nightclub and they begin a torrid affair. Naemi proves to be a bit of an enigma, however, and the more Zhang unravels the mystery of her, the more dangerous their union becomes.
The bestselling author of "Brain on Fire" does a deep dive into an infamous 50-year-old experiment, whereby sane individuals were institutionalized to vet the veracity of psychological diagnoses. What she gleaned from this experience has ramifications for the quality of mental healthcare going forward.
In Kevin Wilson's weird and wonderful fifth novel, the erstwhile friend of politician's wife is called upon to care for her children, twins that spontaneously combust when stressed. "Nothing to See Here" is a poignant and laugh-out-loud tribute to the trials and treasures of being a parent.
"Find Me" picks up decades after André Aciman left off in his beloved novel (and movie), "Call Me by Your Name." In it, we learn the disparate directions Elio and Oliver's lives have taken, and whether their love will ultimately stand the test of time.
In the latest installment of Lee Child's popular Jack Reacher series, our hero discovers that no good deed goes unpunished when he comes to the aid of an elderly couple who have gotten mixed up with a seriously bad crowd.
Short chapter after short chapter act like puzzle pieces as Carmen Maria Machado deconstructs the psychologically abusive relationship she had with a girlfriend. An indelicate but riveting read.
The bassist and co-founder of the Red Hot Chili Peppers details his origin story, one that sees him fleeing a fraught family life to forge a better one with a motley crew of mischief-makers and musicians.
"Little weirds" is what actor and comedian Jenny Slate is calling her latest collection of eclectic writings that veer from the funny, to the heartbreaking, to the profound (and yes, the deeply odd).
"User Friendly: How the Hidden Rules of Design Are Changing the Way We Live, Work, and Play" by Cliff Kuang with Robert Fabricant
Cliff Kuang's "User Friendly" is a fascinating treatise on something many of us take for granted: Good design. From fly swatters to iPhones, our lives have been made infinitely easier by inventions we didn't know we needed, but now can't imagine living without.