Previous Book Club Selections  



The Department of Lost and Found
by Allison Winn Scotch

In this hopeful, humorous, and astonishingly deft debut, Allison Winn Scotch explores what happens when a young woman thinks she's lost everything that matters—and ends up discovering what's truly important. This is a novel that will leave you taking stock of what's important in your own life … and never letting it go.

It didn't start out as the worst day of Natalie Miller's life. At thirty, she is moving up the political ladder, driven by raw ambition and ruthless determination. As the top aide to New York's powerful female senator, she works hard, stays late, and enjoys every bit of it, even if the bills she's pushing through do little to improve the lives of the senator's constituents. And if her boyfriend isn't the sexiest guy alive, at least he's a warm body to come home to.

Then he announces he's leaving. But that news is barely a blip compared to what Natalie's doctor tells her: She has breast cancer. And she can't cure it by merely being headstrong. Now the life Natalie must change is her own.

All her energy, what little of it she has left, must go into saving herself from a merciless disease. So when she's not lying on the sofa recovering from her treatments and indulging in a curious addiction to The Price Is Right, she realizes it's time to take a hard look at her choices. She begins by tracking down the five loves-of-her-life to assess what went wrong. Along the way, she questions her relationships with her friends, her parents, her colleagues, the one who got away, and, most important, with herself: Why is she so busy moving through life that she never stops to embrace it?

As Natalie sleuths out the answers to these questions, her journey of self-discovery takes her down new paths and to unexplored places. And she learns that sometimes when life is at its most unexpected, it's not what you lose that makes you who you are . . . it's what you find.

so universal that brides the world over will sigh in sympathy when they read Hitched.






Hitched
by Carol Higgins Clark

"Bestseller Clark's winning ninth mystery! The lighthearted romp will keep readers guessing who will and won't make it to the altar."
-Publisher's Weekly


Private investigator Regan Reilly and her fiancee Jack "no relation" Reilly, head of the NYPD Major Case Squad, are finally getting married! With the perfect dress selected, and just a week left until the big day, Regan visits the bridal shop only to find the designers bound and gagged, her dress missing along with three others, and a fourth lying tattered with flecks of blood on the floor. Regan quickly gets on the case, and with the days numbered before her big day, she encounters an intriguing mix of brides and grooms-to-be, or perhaps "not-to-be."

Wedding disaster stories are so universal that brides the world over will sigh in sympathy when they read H
itched.






Amanda's Wedding
by Jenny Colgan

Amanda is the kind of girl you love to hate: rich, thin, blonde, and vicious enough to be Satan's own PR agent. Melanie and Fran, Amanda's charming, wisecracking old school friends, simply can't believe it when Amanda manages to get herself engaged to kind, decent Fraser-Mel's old crush, and minor royalty, no less. Determined to save Fraser from a life sentence with the social-climbing Queen of Preen, Mel and Fran rally their eccentric crew of friends around them to help stop Fraser and Amanda from tying the knot with a rope that all but Fraser can see is a noose. Loaded with spot-on observations, razor-sharp wit, and entertaining characters who engage in hilariously memorable antics, this is a riotously funny story of love, life...and the fine art of sabotage.





Hissy Fit
by Mary Kay Andrews

Mary Kay Andrews is back with her best-selling brand of tart-tongued Southern satire in Hissy Fit. With the same effervescent blend of Southern comfort and vitriol that animated her Edgar Award-nominated Savannah Blues and its delicious follow-up Little Bitty Lies, Andrews serves up another juicy romp about heartache, heartbreak—and a touch of revenge—south of the Mason-Dixon Line.






Wedding Season
by Darcy Cosper

Seventeen weddings in six months—what's a girl to do? Especially when she's Joy Silverman, who's perfectly happy in her relationship with Gabe and perfectly adamant about her refusal to ever get married. First, there was the breakup of her parents' marriage and her mother's subsequent emotional meltdown; second, there's the lack of any "empirical evidence that marriage is really all useful or effective these days, that it does anything for relationships and the people in them." But most of Joy's friends and acquaintances—not to mention her recently betrothed mother, father and younger brother—do believe in marriage. Thank goodness cynical Joy's artsy hunk of a boyfriend agrees with her that marriage is as outdated as "using leeches or bloodletting."








 
 
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