Articles

  • 4 weeks ago | audible.com | Susie Dumond |Elif Shafak |Gina Balibrera |Kira Jane Buxton

    Few literary devices intrigue and engage quite like a unique narrative perspective. Even if an arc feels familiar, the introduction of a new lens can shift the story's impact entirely. If you're looking for stories that can help you look at the world in a new way, tune into one of these audiobooks with nonhuman narrators and protagonists. We've got stories written from the perspectives of animals, plants, robots, inanimate objects, and even former humans.

  • 2 months ago | shelf-awareness.com | Olivia Wolfgang-Smith |Kira Jane Buxton |Ali Smith |Suzanne Nelson

    One theme that stands out among many of today's excellent reading recommendations deals with the indelible bonds people form with each other and the places they love. In the poignant and gorgeous graphic memoir This Beautiful, Ridiculous City, Kay Sohini details her fixation on New York City and the allure it held for her, even during her youth in Calcutta.

  • Jan 23, 2025 | redcarpetcrash.com | Kira Jane Buxton |Carter Wilson |Annelise Ryan

    The book is in stores on Tuesday, Jan. 28th from Grand Central. Click on the link to buy a copy. https://amzn.to/3ZJybzLAfter nearly losing the election to a geriatric donkey, newly installed Mayor Delizia Miccuci can’t help but feel like the sun has finally set on the rural Italian village of Lazzarini Boscarino.

  • Jan 6, 2025 | wdio.com | Kira Jane Buxton |Baihly Warfield

    If reading more is on your list of must-dos in 2025, the Bookstore at Fitger’s has a reading challenge for you. Manager Jennifer Jubenville brought a few suggestions based on the categories in the reading challenge: Color in the title: “Blue Sisters” by Coco MellorsWeather-related event: “January Thaw” by Jess LoureyRecommended by a bookseller: “Untamed” by Glennon DoyleBy an author who visits Fitger’s in 2025: “Tartufo” by Kira Jane BuxtonBuxton will be at Fitger’s for an event on Feb. 4.

  • Jun 14, 2024 | kuow.org | Stephen Howie |John Germann |Kira Jane Buxton

    Seattle has a thing about crows. Crows are ubiquitous to the city — a single roost at the University of Washington Bothell campus is home to as many as 16,000 birds. The sight of thousands of crows flying toward the campus at dusk has become one of Seattle’s signature attractions for those in the know. A crow-filled sky might stir Hitchcockian visions for some, a “murder” of crows harassing people when they venture outside.

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