Where in Westerville Are We?

WPL_SRP_0241.jpgCan you solve the mystery of where this picture was taken?

Post a comment with your best guess!

Before You Die

A popular series of books are making the rounds. Wanna know all the things you should do and see before you die?

Check out this series!

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Where in Westerville Are We?

WPL_SRP_0240.jpgCan you solve the mystery of where this picture was taken?

Post a comment with your best guess!

And the winners are…

Readers are on a roll! There were 258 reviews written and seven weekly prizes given out to adult readers this week. Here’s what you’re reading:

A Crack in the Edge of the World by Simon Winchester

A Spot of Bother by Mark Haddon

Dana’s Valley by Janette Oke

Second Time Around by Mary Higgins Clark

Christ the Lord, Out of Egypt by Ann Rice

The Godwins and the Shelleys by William St. Clair

Rosehaven by Catherine Coulter

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What You Can Win This Week 5

Attention to those of you 17 and older (we don’t need to know how much older!): If you write reviews of books you’ve read within the next week and enter them into our Summer Reading drawings, you may win prizes from the following sponsors:

Barnum & Tibbetts, W. G. Grinders, Giant Eagle GetGo, Mama Mimi’ Pizza,
Something Special Shop
, Westerville Symphony

And who wouldn’t love something special? So, you ask, how do you enter your reviews? Check out the How It Works blog post for more info.

Where in Westerville Are We?

WPL_SRP_0243.jpgCan you solve the mystery of where this picture was taken?

Post a comment with your best guess!

What You’re Reading

Summer Reading is in full force! Our adult patrons reviewed 231 books this week!

The winning reviews are as follows:

The Mercy Seller by Brenda Vantrease

Tender Is The Night by F. Scott Fitzgerald

24-Hour Sewing Projects by Linda Causee

Battlefield of the Mind by Joyce Meyer

Quilter’s Apprentice by Jennifer Chiaverini

The Right Attitude to Rain by Alexander McCall Smith

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What You Can Win This Week

Attention to those of you 17 and older (we don’t need to know how much older!): If you write reviews of books you’ve read within the next week and enter them into our Summer Reading drawings, you may win prizes from the following sponsors:

Lindey’s Restaurant, Giant Eagle, Giant Eagle GetGo,
City Barbecue, Uptown Pharmacy, Westerville Symphony

And who wouldn’t love some free food??? So, you ask, how do you enter your reviews? Check out the How It Works blog post for more info.

Beyond Nancy Drew and Hardy Boys

Though Nancy Drew was just revamped for the big screen, you may be looking for some more modern young sleuths to follow.

Much like a kid’s version of the Da Vinci Code, Chasing Vermeer is a mystery surrounding a famous artist. The Wright 3 involves the famous architect Frank Lloyd Wright.

For the slightly more seasoned reader, try Drawing a Blank; or, How I Tried to Solve a Mystery, End a Feud, and Land the Girl of My Dreams by Daniel Ehrenhaft. If the title doesn’t tell you enough, I don’t know what will!

And for those not yet ready to solve the mystery that is reading, try these picture books: The 13th Clue by Ann Jonas, Detective LaRue by Mark Teague, and Jake Gander, Storyville Detective by George McClements.

More Mysteries to Unravel

The Lighthouse by P. D. James.  Scotland Yard Commander Adam Dalgliesh is brought in when a major novelist is found dead on a secluded island off the coast of Cornwall reserved for VIPs.  Was it suicide or murder?  It’s not until another suspicious death that the motive becomes clear in this latest from a British master of suspense.

The Moon Tunnel by Jim Kelly.  Philip Dryden was a top London journalist, but everything changed when he and his wife were in a car crash that left his wife in a coma.  Now she is in a nursing home in the Fens, a flat and marshy area of England, and he has taken a job on the small local newspaper to be nearby.  He still has his nose for news and in this third in the series, investigates the finding of a murdered man at the site of a former WWII POW camp.  Very atmospheric setting and a wonderfully quirky detective.

The Shape of Sand by Marjorie Eccles.  While a country house in England is being renovated for office use just after World War II, a body of a woman is found.  It turns out to be the former lady of the house, who had gone missing in 1910.  Everyone at the time assumed that she had gone off with her lover, but now a murder investigation is launched.  Great characters and an interesting time period add up to a fascinating mystery.

Piece of My Heart by Peter Robinson.  Two murders may be connected: the murder of a young girl at a rock concert in 1969, and the present day murder of a music journalist doing a story about a band who performed at that concert.  This latest in the Inspector Alan Banks series provides an intriguing glimpse of the music scene.

Cypress Grove by James Sallis.  Turner is an ex-cop, ex-con, ex-psychiatrist, and a Vietnam vet.  Wanting to get away from everything, he leaves Memphis and moves to a cabin in the country outside of Cypress Grove, Tennessee, where the local sheriff asks for his help on a murder case.  Incredibly well written, with insights that make you stop and take note, this is a top-notch mystery. If you like it, you’ll want to read the sequel: Cripple Creek.

No Trace by Barry Maitland.  When a little girl names Tracey goes missing, her father, a well-known contemporary artist, uses it as the basis for a conceptual art piece that changes every day, called No Trace. Scotland Yard detectives Brock and Kolla investigate, providing an insider’s look at the London art world. 

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