HARLEM LIBRARY

 

November 8, 2017



Tonight the free “Basic Internet and Email” class will be presented by Triangle Communications from 6:30-8:30 in the library meeting room. Please join us!

The library will be closed Nov. 10 in observance of Veterans Day and Nov. 23 for Thanksgiving.

The Harlem Library Creative Christmas will be Nov. 30, 6 P.M. with guest crafter Shannon VanVoast presenting. Join in a fun evening to kick off the holiday season! Refreshments will be served.

Used books are for sale in the reading room. This on-going book sale replaces the annual book sale held in December.

Remember you are now able to download free ebooks and audio books using your library card with MontanaLibrary2Go. Contact the library for instructions. If you have been using MontanaLibrary2Go using a Blaine County or Havre-Hill card, you may switch to your Harlem card or check out twice as many books!

A new novel by author Jasmyn Ward is “Sing, Unburied, Sing.” This work is an “intimate portrait of a family and an epic tale of hope and struggle” in rural Mississippi past and present.

John le Carre brings to readers the first George Smiley novel in more than twenty-five years. In the novel “A Legacy of Spies” Peter Guillam, a disciple of Smiley, receives a letter from his old service summoning him from retirement to return to London. His Cold War past has come back to claim him. In a riveting story, le

Carre interweaves past and present.

“Something Like Happy” is by Eva Woods. Thirty-five-year-old Annie Hebden is stuck in her boring life. Still mourning a terrible loss, she believes hiding away is safer than remembering what used to be. Then she meets bright, bubbly Polly Leonard who is determined to wake Annie up to life. She challenges her to join her on a mission to find a new way to be happy each day for one hundred days. As Annie slowly realizes there is still joy to be found, Polly needs her new friend more than ever.

Bestselling author Max Lucado’s latest books is “Anxious for Nothing: Finding Calm in a Chaotic World.”

Jim Fergus, author of “One Thousand White Women”, has now written “The Vengeance of Mothers: The Journals of Margaret Kelly and Molly McGill.” This historical fiction explores the time in history when the U.S. government initiated the “Brides for Indians” program thinking this would bring about peace between the U.S. and the Cheyenne Nation.

Other new titles include “If the Creek Don’t Rise” by Leah Weiss, “Unraveling Oliver” by Liz Nugent, and “The Saboteur” by Andrew Gross.

 
 

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