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"The Book Pick" contest Top 5 revealed and voting has started!!
Thank you to all of our authors that submitted their books in our contest! It was difficult to narrow them down to just 5 finalists.
But after much review, we have choosen the 5 books that we, the BB staff, think our book clubs will love! Now it's up to YOU to pick the winner!
Time to put on your inspectors hat and check out these "under-known" books and VOTE-VOTE-VOTE for your favorite! Click here to log in. On your personal page there is an ad below your photo that can take you to the vote page.
If you are a registered Clubie, you may vote once a day for the vote period. Voting period lasts from Nov. 30 - Dec. 23.
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Top 5 VOTE OFF in the Winter 09-10 "The Book Pick" Contest
Click here to log in.
On your personal page there is an ad below your photo that can take you to the
vote page where you can vote for your favorite.
Contestants include:

The Hierophant of 100th Street
By Cullen Dorn
A semi-autobiographical account of a young man born and raised in the worst slums of New York who ventures out to discover the meaning of life, and finds romance, mysticism, and purpose behind its very mystery.
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Members Only "North Shore Confessions" Part One
By Jr. Todd Love Ball
The gym is always known as a place for working out...but there is so much more! Follow Marcus, a fiery personal trainer with a brash attitude as he gets caught up in the riches and loathing of the North Shore of Chicago.
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Key Light
By Pat Stewart
An artists journey. Denied her daughter from birth, Sada finds her life through her ever deepening talent as an artist. The story is filled with passion, reflection, revelation, and self-discovery.
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it is what it is...beating breast cancer
By Carol Chatellier Kleinrock
I've tried to capture the thoughts of both myself & the people around me while going through chemo and radiation. After starting an email chain my family and friends were informed, enlightened, amused and most importantly not afraid for me.
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Among Us Women
By Joan Lerner
3 women of different ages and ethnicity who have in common a career in interior design. The novel is set in the mid-eighties to the mid-nineties and explores many issues that still persist--women's empowerment, abortion, homosexuality, euthanasia--all provocative issues.
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Weekly Featured Book

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How I Became a Famous Novelist
By Steve Hely
Pete Tarslaw wants is simple enough: a realistic amount of fame that will open new avenues of sexual opportunity; the kind of financial comfort that will allow him to spend his life pursuing hobbies such as boating or skeet shooting at his stately home by the ocean or a scenic lake; and—perhaps mostly importantly—the chance to humiliate his ex-girlfriend at her wedding. This is the story of how he succeeds in getting it all, and what it costs him in the end. Narrated by an unlikely literary legend, How I Became A Famous Novelist pinballs from the post-college slums of Boston, to the fear-drenched halls of Manhattan's publishing houses, from the gloomy purity of Montana’s foremost writing workshop to the hedonistic hotel bars of the Sunset Strip. The horrifying, hilarious tale of how Pete’s “pile of garbage” called The Tornado Ashes Club became the most talked about, blogged about, read, admired, and reviled novel in America will change everything you think you know about literature, appearance, truth, beauty, and those people out there, somewhere in America, who still care about books.
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Newbies to Note!
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Stones into Schools: Promoting Peace with Books, Not Bombs, in Afghanistan and Pakistan
By Greg Mortenson
(12/1/2009)
From the author of the #1 bestseller Three Cups of Tea, the continuing story of this determined humanitarian's efforts to promote peace through education
In this dramatic first-person narrative, Greg Mortenson picks up where Three Cups of Tea left off in 2003, recounting his relentless, ongoing efforts to establish schools for girls in Afghanistan; his extensive work in Azad Kashmir and Pakistan after a massive earthquake hit the region in 2005; and the unique ways he has built relationships with Islamic clerics, militia commanders, and tribal leaders even as he was dodging shootouts with feuding Afghan warlords and surviving an eight-day armed abduction by the Taliban. He shares for the first time his broader vision to promote peace through education and literacy, as well as touching on military matters, Islam, and women-all woven together with the many rich personal stories of the people who have been involved in this remarkable two-decade humanitarian effort.
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U is for Undertow (Kinsey Millhone Mystery)
By SUE GRAFTON
(12/1/2009)
Sue Grafton has never written the same book twice. And so it is with this, her twenty-first.
It's April, 1988, a month before Kinsey Millhone's thirty-eighth birthday, and she's alone in her office doing paperwork when a young man arrives unannounced. He has a preppy air about him and looks as if he'd be carded if he tried to buy booze, but Michael Sutton is twenty-seven, an unemployed college dropout. Twenty-one years earlier, a four-year-old girl disappeared. A recent reference to her kidnapping has triggered a flood of memories. Sutton now believes he stumbled on her lonely burial when he was six years old. He wants Kinsey's help in locating the child's remains and finding the men who killed her.
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"Oh if the whole world could read, what a world it would be!"
Support Literacy. Go to www.bookbundlz.com to learn how to support literacy in your area.

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