Sponsored News: Summer is getting longer and hotter. With it comes a more relaxed outlook — no school to go to, no lunch to prepare or conferences to attend. It’s a great time for catching up on guilty pleasures you might have missed nine months ago.
Summer is the perfect time to be a bookworm.
“I still cherish the notion that summer reading is more leisurely and wonderful than the rest of the year,”Kris Kleindienst, coowner of Left Bank Books St. Louis Mo. In an interview, Kleindienst told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
The following recommendations can be used as a guideline for what you should take on vacation or to the pool.
* “The Lightbearers,”Nora Garcia One reviewer stated that “Garcia has done an excellent job of providing a mix of the paranormal, evil geniuses and robots into one thrilling story around a couple that removes the boundaries of a single life.” “The Lightbearers”Let’s start by showing Jean and George Crystal that they are more than just a couple. They are charged with educating and protecting humanity. They will be shown, as they move through the 3,300-year history, how George and Jean, originally Egyptian kings and queens, can transcend all borders to accomplish their task.
To find out more or to purchase the book, click here click hereSearch “Nora Garcia”Amazon.
* “The Girls in the Garden,”Lisa Jewell Anyone who considers themselves to be a sleuth will recognize this mystery in London. A girl discovers her sister Grace, 13 years old, unconscious in a corner of a communal green. While the community denies any wrongdoing, as the investigation continues, secrets and betrayals are revealed, challenging the idyllic image of the neighborhood.
* “End of Watch,”Stephen King The Bill Hodges Trilogy is completed by the acclaimed author.”Mr. Mercedes”And “Finders Keepers”In typical page-turning fashion, the story pits an elderly protagonist (Detective Hodges), against his nemesis, who is a mass killer with even more terrifying methods than before. Elizabeth Hand, Washington Post reviewer says “One finishes this novel feeling great empathy for its resolute protagonist and even greater trepidation about that next round of Candy Crush.”