Giveaway: Expand Your TBR with These 5 July Book Club Picks

  • Wednesdays at One by Sandra A. Miller

If you don’t confront your past…it might confront you first.

Dr. Gregory Weber appears to have an enviable life, but he feels increasingly disconnected. His marriage is strained, his children are distant, and he can’t stop fixating on an unforgivable mistake he made when he was seventeen. Something no one else knows about. In searching for the answers, Gregory risks losing everything that matters: his career, his family and his mind.

  • A Twisted Love Story by Samantha Downing

Wes and Ivy are madly in love. It’s the type of romance people write stories about. But what kind of story? When it’s good, it’s great. When it’s bad, it’s really bad.

On the night of their worst breakup, one of them took things too far, and someone ended up dead. If they can stick together, they can survive anythingeven the tightening net of a police investigation. Because one more breakup might just be their last…

  • Maribelle’s Shadow by Susannah Marren

As the editorial director of Palm Beach Confidential, Maribelle Walker knows what lurks beneath the glittering facade of the moneyed elite on Florida’s most glamorous coast. Or does she?

When her adored and impressive husband dies suddenly, the secrets and lies between Maribelle and her sisters rise to the surface. As their carefully constructed image unravels, each sister realizes she must fend for herself. The pathway out is steep and worth any risk. Until the winner takes all.

  • Under the Naga Tail by Mae Bunseng Taing (with James Taing)

A courageous and poignant memoir of one young man’s daring escape from Cambodia’s genocidal regime.

Forced from his home by the Khmer Rouge, teenager Mae Taing struggles to endure years of backbreaking work, constant starvation, and ruthless cruelty from his captors. When Mae is able to overcome unthinkable odds in the hopes of reuniting with his family, fate takes a cruel turn as he flees war-torn Cambodia. Caught up in the terror once more, it is only his willpower to survive and dreams of a better country that give Mae the strength to face the dangers ahead.

  • Not My Fault by S.B. Frasca

“Not My Fault” is popping up everywhere: at home, in the park, even at school. At first, it’s a secret way for Hy to deal with being bullied, but the protest art becomes addictive and morphs into a massive, creative project in defense of other social injustices.

Hy stands alone until a chance encounter with the exotic Belinda changes the shape of everything, and he begins to buzz with newfound confidence. But when Belinda gets pregnant, Hy has to navigate more uncharted territory and add to some already messy feelings of lust, loss and friendship.