I'm so excited about the response to the listing of the Adirondack Guest Informer authors and their books here in my most recent post (see "Good Reads for Christmas Giving.") These are the authors and books featured in the magazine's new feature, "The North Country Bookstore," which we call your way to "Take the Adirondacks home with you." The feature debuts in January. Here are some more titles to tantalize you.
Secrets Dark and Deep, by Anne White
“A lively puzzler. White’s best yet.” Julia Spencer-Fleming: All Mortal Flesh. In this fourth Lake George Mystery, young mayor Loren Graham stumbles on a terrible secret and is forced to confront her greatest fear.
www.annewhitemysteries.com
whiteink@roadrunner.com
Hilliard and Harris, 2007, Worldwide Mystery 2009
Available: Amazon or your favorite book source
ISBN 1-59133-198-6, 978-1-59133-198- 8
Nature Through the Seasons, by Nancy Wotton Scarzello. Are you interested in barred owls, birch trees and dragonflies? Wild mushrooms, hibernation, ice-out and bears? Discover nature in your own backyard with this collection of essays from the author’s experiences on Lake George and in surrounding fields and forest. Signed copies available: from the author ($13 includes shipping), www.nancyscarzello.com or 101 Hall Rd., Ticonderoga, NY 12883
Adirondack Mouse and the Perilous Journey, by Irene Uttendorfsky. “Stuart Little meets The Lion and the Mouse in this new tale in which the smallest of heroes overcomes the biggest obstacles.” Liana Mahoney, Teacher and Author. 2006 Best Children’s Book, Adirondack Center for Writing. Young readers will cheer for Adirondack Mouse as they follow him on his Journey, a quest as beautiful and perilous as the Adirondack Mountains themselves.
www.ireneuttendorfsky.com , iuttendorfsky@aol.com
Spruce Gulch Press, 2006
Distributed by North Country Books
Available Amazon.com, local bookstores
ISBN 0-9625714-4-x
Watch my next post for the remaining books featured in the Winter issue of Adirondack Guest Informer.
Immortal
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Nature is the great recycler. Today’s mighty oak is tomorrow’s fertile
soil; today’s river is tomorrow’s snowfall. These bodies we inhabit? Like
every leaf...
2 months ago
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