Book Buzz
Looking for a good book? Ask at the Reference Desk for a suggestion or two. Whether you are a
reader who likes romance, mystery, fantasy, science fiction or historical books, our librarians can assist you in finding that next great read.
Got the Downton Abbey fever? Can’t get enough of this compelling story and world? Give these titles a try…
FICTION
Fellowes, Julian. creator/writer of Downton Abbey & Gosford Park–also wrote: Snobs (2005). Preparing to marry heir Charles Broughton, attractive accountant’s daughter Edith Lavery makes humorous and astute observations about contemporary England’s class system.
Forster, E.M. Howard’s End. (1910) Howards End, an English country house, passes to the moneyed, the cultured, and then to the lower class.
Galsworthy, John. The Forsyte Saga (1920). The classic portrait of upper-middle-class life in Victorian England contains three novels–The Man of Property, In Chancery, and To Let–and their interconnecting interludes. Also an ExxonMobil Masterpiece Theatre production on DVD.
Ishiguro, Kazuo. The Remains of the Day (1988). Also a stunning film–Stevens, an elderly butler, hopes to rise to the top of his profession, and he remains stoic and unemotional at his father’s death and neglects the opportunity to pursue a relationship with a former housekeeper.
Continue »





Click on the titles below to search the catalog
Beattie, Ann. Mrs. Nixon: a novelist imagines a life.
Pat Nixon remains one of our most mysterious and intriguing public figures, the only modern first lady who never wrote a memoir. Beattie, like many of her generation, dismissed Richard Nixon’s wife as “interchangeable with a Martian.” But decades later, she wonders what it must have been like to be
married to such a spectacularly ambitious and catastrophically self-destructive man. Continue »
Need Holiday Gift suggestions? Wrap Up Books!
Beebe librarians have created lists of suggestions for gift ideas for every reader (young and old) and for every taste. Continue »





**Highly Recommended by readers
Black, Cara. Murder on the Ile Saint-Louis Aimee LeDuc series; bk.7
Block, Lawrence. A Drop of the Hard Stuff. Matthew Scudder series; bk.17
Continue »

This list includes General Fiction & Romance titles–if you are looking for a mystery, try Holiday Mysteries.
Ahern, Cecelia. The Gift. (2009)
Alcott, Louisa May. A Quiet Little Woman (1999).
Alan, Theresa. Dangers of Mistletoe. (2006)
Continue »





Click on the titles below to search the catalog
Ajvide Lindqvist, John, Harbor. [HORROR]
“From the author of the international and New York Times bestseller Let the Right One In (Let Me In) comes this stunning and terrifying book which
begins when a man’s six-year-old daughter vanishes. One ordinary winter afternoon on a snowy island, Anders and Cecilia take their six-year-old daughter Maja across the ice to visit the lighthouse in the middle of the frozen channel. While the couple explore the lighthouse, Maja disappears — either into thin air or under thin ice — leaving not even a footprint in the snow. Two years later, alone and more or less permanently drunk, Anders returns to the island to regroup. He slowly realizes that people are not telling him all they know; even his own mother, it seems, is keeping secrets. What is happening in Domaro, and what power does the sea have over the town’s inhabitants?”–Provided by publisher.
Continue »





Click on the titles below to search the catalog
Abu-Jaber, Diana. Birds of paradise.
After a five year absence, an eighteen-year-old runaway returns to her family in Miami to deal with the guilty secret that caused her to flee.
Airgood, Ellen. South of superior.
Michigan women
Albert, Susan Wittig. The tale of Castle Cottage.
Beatrix and William’s impending nuptials are delayed when the remodeling of their future home, Castle Cottage, causes more problems than anticipated in the latest installment of a series that incorporates events from the life of Beatrix Potter and her beloved characters.
Allan, Christa. The edge of grace.
Family relationships/Christian Fiction
Continue »