19 Best Book Deals for 9/21/19: Fat Girl Walking, Reaper Man, Strange the Dreamer, and more

As of this posting, all of these deals are active, but I don’t know for how long!
Less than $1

The Accidental Life Swap by Jennifer Joyce

Less than $2

Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister by Gregory Maguire

Fat Girl Walking by Brittany Gibbons

Tales of Two Americas: Stories of Inequality in a Divided Nation by John Freeman

The Noble Servant by Melanie Dickerson

Revolution Sunday by Wendy Guerra

Reaper Man by Terry Pratchett

The Female Persuasion by Meg Wolitzer

Washington: A Life by Ron Chernow

Ghosted by Rosie Walsh

Bibliophile: An Illustrated Miscellany by Jane Mount

Talon by Julie Kagawa

Less than $3

Chaos by Patricia Cornwell

A Train in Winter by Caroline Moorehead

The Autobiography of Eleanor Roosevelt by Eleanor Roosevelt

The Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefvater

Loving vs. Virginia by Patricia Hruby Powell

Bone Gap by Laura Ruby

Strange the Dreamer by Laini Taylor


Recommended from this post:

#ReadingMyLibrary Challenge: Week One Update

I haven’t gotten very far in the books that I checked out…shame shame, I know. But I’ll get to them! I just have to get through an ARC first and then I’m good to go.

This week’s challenge topic is:

Tell us a little about your library (include a picture if you can!).

In my sign-up post I already showed pictures of my current local libraries, so I thought I’d talk about the library that really started it all for me: The Kenmore, WA library.

Now, at the end of my senior year of high school they finished constructing the shiny, NEW Kenmore Library, but the one that I grew up going to was anything but glamorous. It was a portable. Literally. You know those portable classrooms that they stick in high school parking lots to make room for more classes? That’s exactly what the library was! It smelled the same and it was very small, but it was one of my favorite places to go as a kid. I can still recall the smell…not anything bad, but kind of musty and old. It just smells like my library. Here’s a picture of the building from Google Maps taken August 2011 (just two months after the new library was completed). It’s hard to see with all the trees, but I think you can kind of get the idea of what it was. The black garbage sack in front is actually covering the old King County Library System sign.

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Man, I loved that library. The librarians knew me and my siblings by name and they always asked for our library card number when we were checking out because they knew we had it memorized. If I went in alone they always asked how my family was doing. I dreamed of working there in high school, but because it was such a small library, there were never any openings. This is where I fell in love with reading, books, and libraries.

I think I’ve only been to the new library two or three times (I left soon after it was completed for college), but it’s beautiful. There are a ton of windows and the whole space is open and bright. There’s a parking garage now to accommodate more patrons. It looks modern and new and is easily five times the size of the old library.

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Libraries have always been and always will be safe places for me. I cannot imagine living somewhere without a local library. Unfortunately, I think a lot of local libraries are suffering from a lack of funding. Now, I’m definitely not asking anyone to go out and donate money, but what I am asking is for people to find your local library. Get yourself a library card. Get your kids library cards. Check out some books, or movies, or CDs. ANYTHING. Just use your local library.

(Pictures of the new library were all taken by Lara Swimmer and can be found here)