Books to Read

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14 Books You Need to Read in January
13 new books to read in January 2017: How To Murder Your Life by Cat Marnell
Sweetbitter
Sweet bitter, A Novel- A lush, raw, thrilling novel of the senses about a year in the life of a uniquely beguiling young woman, set in the wild, alluring world of a famous downtown New York restaurant.
The F Word by Liza Palmer - BookBub
“Fresh, frank, and fearless. Liza Palmer is a road warrior of contemporary fiction.” --Georgia Clark, author of The Regulars Olivia Morten is perfect. Maybe she’s constantly hungry, but her body is to die for. Maybe her high-flying publicist job has taken over her life, but her clients are L.A.’s hottest celebrities. Maybe her husband is never around, but he is a drop-dead-gorgeous doctor. And maybe her past harbors an incredibly embarrassing secret, but no one remembers high school...right? ...
The Program (Program Series #1)|Paperback
I remember the day I found this book. I walked into Barnes and Noble looking for some new books and the title grabbed my attention. I read into it and I was hooked. I knew that there was no way that I was going to leave the store without this book. The Program is so different yet so amazing. As soon as I finished this book (a few days later) I bought the second one to it. This book is a MUST read.
BookBub Blog - The book lover's inside source for news, tips, & deals
The Young Wives Club by Julie Pennell is a funny, heartwarming book. One of 2017's biggest books to read for women.
Lindsay Humes | Dynamic WordPress Themes for Food Bloggers
12 books that helped shape my business and brand, Girlboss Reading List for Creative Entrepreneurs
The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art of Decluttering and Organizing
The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art of Decluttering and Organizing by Marie Kondo http://www.amazon.com/dp/1607747308/ref=cm_sw_r_pi_dp_64Imvb13HBQJ1
Short reviews of fiction from Australia and overseas
“Jesse Eisenberg​'s satirical gifts seem to be finely honed on neuroses of all stripes. The title story is written as a series of restaurant reviews from a precocious nine-year-old, taken to the classiest eateries in New York by his mother. The opulence of the cuisine disguises serious parental manipulation and neglect. Eisenberg writes with lancing wit about social misfits who are, perhaps, less insane than the worlds around them.” SMH
Mrs. Engels
The illiterate lover and eventual wife of a coauthor of The Communist Manifesto is the star of this enthralling work of historical fiction.
Readings Books
Life Moves Pretty Fast: The Lessons We Learned from Eighties Movies (and Why We Don't Learn Them from Movies Any More)