Discover new releases to boost your Winter Reading.
January ended with snow and ice, but these new books coming out in February give us something to look forward to, regardless of the weather.
Amie Teller has been stuck in a time loop, reliving September 17 every day for two years. But one day she wakes up, and it’s actually tomorrow. As she struggles to remember how to face a new day, she learns that her neighbor was murdered yesterday. As someone who knows that day better than anyone, she’s determined to solve the case in Katie Siegel’s "Out of the Loop."
In 1920s Montreal, Agnes Aubert runs her cat shelter with meticulous care and has absolutely no tolerance for magicians. But the only space she can afford contains a covert magic shop in the basement, run by an infamous and irritating magician who’s also allergic to cats. As they face a police investigation and a threat that could destroy the city, they must form an uneasy truce and Agnes needs to decide how much chaos, and love, she can let into her life in "Agnes Aubert’s Mystical Cat Shelter" by Heather Fawcett.
From a 19th century maker of handmade playing cards to one of the most influential entertainment companies in the world, Nintendo’s story is anything but conventional. "Super Nintendo" by Keza MacDonald traces the company’s evolution through the people, ideas and games that reshaped how the world plays. Part cultural history, part love letter to play, this energetic and deeply researched history captures how a quirky company built on experimentation and risk-taking came to enchant generations of players and continues to shape what games can be.
For more than a decade, Joseph Stalin waged a relentless, secret war against his most dangerous rival: the exiled revolutionary Leon Trotsky. In "The Death of Trotsky," Josh Ireland traces the global manhunt that followed Trotsky from Europe to a guarded compound in Mexico City, where the long pursuit ended in August 1940, with a single, devastating blow from an ice pick. Moving between Moscow, Paris and Mexico, Ireland reconstructs the deadly game of cat and mouse through a vivid cast of spies, artists, idealists and operatives, culminating in an unforgettable portrait of the Soviet agent who infiltrated Trotsky’s inner circle and carried out the assassination.
Henrietta Wood was born enslaved and emancipated as an adult, only to be kidnapped and sold back into bondage. When she was once again emancipated at the end of the Civil War, she sued the man who kidnapped her and won the largest reparations ever awarded to a formerly enslaved person in the United States. Combining Selene Castrovilla’s free verse text with Erin K. Robinson’s striking illustrations, "Twice Enslaved" is an illuminating biography for middle grade readers.
When Persepolis is abruptly removed from Chicago Public School classrooms and libraries, students at one high school are quick to recognize the bitter irony of banning a book about life under censorship. Inspired by the real 2013 CPS controversy, this powerful graphic novel follows an ensemble of teens as they grapple with the order, investigate how it happened and decide whether and how to resist. The teen graphic novel "Wake Now in the Fire" by Jarrett Dapier and illustrated by AJ Dungo captures the transformative power of collective action and the stakes of defending intellectual freedom.
Celebrate George Washington’s birthday month with a premier resource from The University of Virginia Press. "The Papers of George Washington Digital Edition" unites five series and Washington’s complete diaries; 83 volumes of scholarship in one searchable platform. Browse content by date, author or recipient. Follow linked cross‑references and delve into the documents that shaped the early United States as we celebrate Arlington 250.