I have lots of new books, including Stephen King’s, “It”. Dan Rather’s, “What Unites Us”. A book about Leonardo da Vinci. Another book about the Crusades. Lots of stuff about Renaissance art.
I'm thinking I would have noticed your 'user name' by now if you've been here such a long while. Did you change your name recently? And, yes, I know -- it's none of my business! Feel free to ignore, ha! :)
"Pretty Intense" by Danica Patrick is a fitness lifestyle book. "World Record Watches", Edition 4 by Garrett Belcher tells the most expensive, most complicated, most water-resistant, most antimagnetic, first pocketwatches and first wristwatches, oldest watchmaker still active, smallest, widest, etc.
"American Gods" by Neil Gaiman, "Remainder" by Tom McCarthy, and "Annihilition" by Jeff Vandermeer. Remainder is for a reading group, the others are for private reading only.
Indeed it is. This is one book that reinforces an important principle: That is, would you endure imprisonment, torture and a gruesome death to defend a lie? Probably not. The devotion and dedication that brought people to Choose martyrdom ahead of compromise, is confirmation of those truths they died for.
I recently bought Love Oliver from the authors Andy and Jennifer Gill, but it may not count as new as it was published in 2011 (reprint 2012).
Before that it was "Oh, it's yersel', ya bugger!" autobiography of Jack Kellet, but that was secondhand.
Nevile Davidson A Life to Be Lived by Andrew G Ralston biography of the minister that conducted the confirmation service for my father and thirty years later myself was bought hot off the press.
Btw the one I last read was published last year, but was borrowed from the church library.
This post was edited by Malizz at February 17, 2020 2:42 PM MST