
Librarians Love Books (Shocker, We Know)
Of course, there's much more to working in libraries than books, but for many of us, the books are still what we love most. In 2025, we made time to explore what continues to be a rich world of literature, and are happy to have a platform to share our most memorable discoveries with you. Many of our best-loved titles were published in the past year, BUT we are also fierce champions of the backlist. So this is a collection of ALL the books we experienced for the first time in this latest trip around the sun that we know will stick with us for a long time.
Here is a link to the complete list, but you can scroll this post to browse by category: Hall of Fame (recommended by more than one librarian), Fiction, Genre Fiction, and Nonfiction.
Hall of Fame
Recommended by: Brett, Leah, and Sean
"The whole ass series. It starts out like a big dumb popcorn flick of a book/series and then slowly transforms into something with real heart and real feelings. Excellently paced and plotted the adventures of Carl and Princess Donut are the best books I’ve read in a long time." - Brett
"I’m currently waiting on hold for The Gate of the Feral Gods. I agree about the slow transformation from something utterly unserious to a series full of heart. I love these books and it feels like they came into the world exactly when we needed them!" - Leah
"Brett summed it up perfectly. Lots of fun." - Sean
Recommended by: Mary and Erica
"The 50th hunger games, the 2nd quarter quell, and the story of Haymitch Abernathy becoming the victor. This Hunger Games prequel will leave you in tears. I still randomly think about the closing line and get a pang of immense sadness. Haymitch’s Hunger Games experience is heartbreaking and maddening in equal measure. A worthy addition to its predecessors. - Mary
"Possibly the best Hunger Games book so far." - Erica
Recommended by Kady and Erica
"When Lucie’s daughter calls into Heartstrings, a live romance hotline, worried about her mother’s lack of a love life, Lucie becomes a viral sensation. But an offer to cohost the show, and become captain of her own romantic destiny, gives her a chance to revitalize her outlook on life, and love. This Sleepless in Seattle retelling truly does tug at the heartstrings, and as Lucie falls in love with love, it’s impossible not to fall along with her. A truly perfect romance novel, and potentially my favorite new release of the year." - Kady
Recommended by Teagan, Leah, and Adam
"Retelling of Carmilla. Reads like a classic literature novel & well researched for the setting of Victorian England. Everything I could’ve wanted in a Carmilla retelling; sensual, bloodthirsty, and ultimately liberating for the protagonist." - Teagan
Recommended by Allison M. and Mary Ann
"Definitely the most important book I’ve read this year (3 times in fact, as I took this in as audiobook, full-text novel, and graphic novel). This book explores various ways that individuals can take steps to hinder or halt oppressive authorities. The author shares key ways dictatorships have evolved through history. The junk-journal style art in the graphic novel gives the material extra depth. For such a heavy topic, I was impressed that the writing wasn’t dense, cumbersome, or overly complex." - Allison
Recommended by Mary Ann and Margo
"An interesting murder mystery YA book following teens in 3 different timelines – 1940’s Hitler Youth, 1980’s West Berlin punk movement, and 2020’s Covid lockdown in NYC. I loved the fairytales, the musical and cultural references, and the way the book addressed the hard decisions we make about who we will choose to be when the world is telling us to be a certain way. LGBTQIA+ inclusive." - Mary Ann
Recommended by Shirley and Jake V.
"Riverine Dreams reads as a prairie river love song. In this inspired and lyrical volume Lawrence-based environmental journalist George Frazier honors wild landscapes and human stewards in our region and fords deep time where prairie meets river — complete with Lisa Grossman’s luminous artwork on the cover." - Shirley
"Prairie rivers and prairie history, both natural and cultural, told with verve and humor. A colorful, extensive, engaging liquid road trip through prairies unfamiliar and unseen from Montana on south, it’s the perfect follow-up to George’s The Last Wild Places of Kansas, and a real encouragement to get out there and experience these watery wild places while the getting’s good. Read it now so you’re ready for spring." - Jake V.
Recommended by Leah, Kevin, and Polli
"If you, like me, are not a Horror reader… let’s talk. The book is an incredible tale, told mainly in journal entries, by three people – a modern day professor, her Lutheran minister great, great, great grandfather, and Good Stab, a mysterious Native American man that comes to confess his sins to said minister. What follows is an excellent, thoughtful narration of a Blackfeet man who is watching his people dwindle, the tribes he lives side by side with are dwindling, in large part because buffalo are being slaughtered for their coats and left coated with poison, so the meat could not be harvested. Against this backdrop, we get the tale of Good Stab, who has been cursed by a monster to live a half-life as a vampire who is single-mindedly seeking revenge on the buffalo hunters and their ilk. I loved the way Stephen Graham Jones told this vampire tale -if you’re used to the Dracula variety, I’d suggest trying this out, it’s really brilliantly told." - Polli
"Ravenous, Donner Party, Buffalo Hunter Hunter, it’s all great. Tell me about how awful things are and suckin’ blood." - Kevin
Recommended by Leah and Mary
"Centered around a young tuberculosis patient named Henry Reider, who John Green met in 2019 at the Lakka Government Hospital in Sierra Leone. He expertly tells the story of not only Henry but the history of tuberculosis and how it is still very much a problem today despite it being a treatable disease. Be warned because this book will have you deep diving into Tuberculosis and desperate to get your hands on any and all books on the subject, thankfully John Green makes this easy for you by providing additional resources to check out at the end of the book." - Mary
Recommended by Danno and Kevin
"Wintertime always calls for books about how shitty the cold is. Daniel James Brown may not have eaten anyone, but he sure does talk about it like he has." - Kevin
"Like Kevin, in Winter I gravitate toward books of wintry disaster. One of my favorite winter activities is listening to hypothermic tales on audiobook while I shovel snow. If I’m going to have to experience Winter, then give me some cannibalism, paradoxical undressing and terminal burrowing! I’m not sure if it’s an attempt to tell myself that it could be worse…”I could be freezing to death in the Himalayas”, or if it’s my version of Antarctic’s Heroic Age/Westward Expansion Pioneering Spirit…”I’m gonna clear this sidewalk of snow even if it takes eating my neighbor’s leg to finish it!” Misery? Disaster? Cannibalism? This book has it all. Well, except for recipes." - Danno
Fiction
"A not so faithful retelling of the events surrounding the meeting between conquistador Hernán Cortés and Aztec emperor Mocteczuma II in Tenochtitlan 1519. An absurd, dry, darkly funny, and psychedelic historical fiction. I won’t spoil it except to say it’s got a perfect 10 of an ending." - Ian
"If you want to take a slow, charming meander through time and place, this book is for you. If you love Irish storytelling, where wordplay and wit are as important as any plot, this book is for you. Williams transports us to Faha in the 1950s, where two miracles have occurred – the rain has stopped and electricity is coming to western Ireland. In telling that story, he gives us a boy’s coming of age, a man’s retrospective, and a meditation on love and life. Excellent character development, tremendous sense of place, and language that will make you both weep and rejoice that you had the privilege of reading it. This book made me a Niall Williams fan and I’ve started collecting the rest of his stories." - Polli
"Interwoven truly intriguing portraits of individual family members as they hurtle towards an ending that will leave you flabbergasted." - Erica
"Our narrator’s fondest wish is to be a writer, and she will be. She’ll publish stories that weave her life’s great loves and losses, of which there are many, into beloved works of fiction. But before she does any of that, she is just an English student, in her senior year of college, about to fall in love–for the first time. With every literary fiction novel I read, I find myself left wanting. I had long decided perhaps the genre just isn’t my cup of tea, but this novel gave me everything I’ve been looking for." - Kady
"This latest work by British author Ian McEwan is an exemplary example of why he is one of modern literature’s most beloved writers. What We Can Know is a masterclass in creating an engrossing plot through the lives of the characters within the narrative. This novel set in 2119 follows scholar Thomas Metcalfe’s search for a poem, ‘A Corona for Vivien’, that was read at a dinner party of writers in 2014. What fascinates is the manner of how Metcalfe recreates events leading up and including the party through e-mails, social media posts, texts, yet despite all the evidence he discovers this poem evades him at every turn! As a fan of poetic form, there is an added element of enjoyment, but it’s not a requirement to understand this novel. Then there is the vision of what our planet looks like less than a hundred years in the future. At times, bleak, then survivable and with possibly more joy than now. Of course, there is a twisty ending that is pure McEwan and literally made me gasp. I cannot recommend this book enough as it haunted me during, as well as, long after reading it." - Ilka
"Not just another predictable account of a destination wedding of the ultrawealthy. An absolutely original story featuring characters of surprising depth, perception, and humor." - Randi
"I picked up Williams’ This Is Happiness after a staff recommendation on this list last year, and loved it. Time of the Child is a continuation of sorts, set in the same small Irish town shortly after the events of the previous book, but focused on different characters. It’s got a little bit of everything: lost love, grief, family drama, humor, you name it. Most of all, the little town of Faha, which has recently just been electrified (even though it’s 1962), has a feeling of community that’s sometimes hard to find in today’s world." - Dan C.
"It reminds me a little of the movie Sliding Doors because it explores the different paths your life can take based on a momentary decision. In this case, it’s the name a battered woman chooses for her son in the name records office in England in the 1980’s. I loved the wildly different ways the boy’s name impacted him, his mother, his sister, and his father. LGBTQIA+ inclusive." - Mary Ann
"Through three interwoven stories, the book explores themes of water’s power as a historical witness, the displacement of people, and the legacy of the ancient Epic of Gilgamesh. This was beautifully written and inspired me to research more on these themes and legacies." - Amber
"Bog Queen is a complex mystery rooted in northwestern England offering three female perspectives — revealing the inner-thoughts of a contemporary newly trained forensic anthropologist, a young druid healer from centuries past, and a voice from the wild peat moss bog." - Shirley
"A hilarious satire set during the Civil War featuring a unique, outlandish main character." - Erica
"Okay, hear me out. My friend Erica invited me to read Moby Dick with her, and as a librarian, I thought… I tell people all the time they should read what they love. I didn’t think I’d love Moby Dick. But I love Erica and said yes. I’m so glad because NOW I think people should make room to read something that challenges them, too. How to do this? I had some “shipmates” and we read it in a small group, sections at a time. The chapters are often very short, the language is beautiful, the references are LEGION. You will be forced to root around in your brain to remember literary, cultural, religious references, to search for words you don’t know, and maybe even to re-read sentences. Trust me, this is not a con, it is a PRO. I thought I knew what Moby Dick was about and I DID NOT. There is so much beauty and meaning and HUMOR to be mined (Melville is witty as HECK) and I encourage you to give this one a go, bite by bite, if only to say you chased that white whale to the end." - Polli
"Timely reflection on how we treat one another when times are tough. This one is still simmering for me." - Amber
"A dark and moody eco-thriller set on a remote island in the Antarctic centers extreme weather and the pensive human caretakers of a seed vault and research station. Soon they’ll be forced to abandon with rising sea levels. When a mysterious woman washes on shore, barely alive, Dominic Salt and his three children come to her rescue. And now their radio communication has been destroyed. Such a deeply moving story of love, loss, and learning to trust and to find inner courage in the face of climate anxiety!" - Shirley
"Shut up, his books don’t have to address every dumb thing that’s wrong with the 21st century. Just read and have a good time. He’s good at telling stories and making up weird names. We’re blessed that an 88 year old obviously still cares about what he’s writing and not just churning out bullshit." - Kevin
"A YA novel that gave me that somewhat indescribable “this is what it felt like to read YA as a teen” feeling. A chronically ill teen grows apart from her best friend while her parent’s relationship collapses. Dolores is such a fun protagonist and I want to see more from this author." - Margo
"2025 wasn’t my best reading year, but it’s ending on a high note! In December, I picked up Adam Mars-Jones’s 2020 novella “Box Hill: A Story of Low Self-Esteem,” about the relationship between a young man and the older biker with whom he stumbles (literally) into a 24/7 dom/sub relationship. It’s odd, compelling, occasionally upsetting, occasionally lovely, and always beautifully written. The last paragraph, and last line in particular, are absolute killers." - Meredith
"Four women from vastly different backgrounds, each struggling with dark secrets, form a forbidden/subversive book club in 1895. I loved the sisterhood, the mentor-mentee relationships, and I thought the deep dive into the rampant institutionalization of “troublesome” women in that time period was super informative." - Mary Ann
"Linda is obsessed with planes. Romantically. Sexually. Particularly plane crashes. She’s got a whole belief system about them. It’s not great. But seeing as she’s not doing anything to encourage said crashes, it’s not really a problem until she makes a friend and she’s invited to share her hopes and dreams with said friend’s quarterly vision board brunch group. Laugh out loud funny and sweeter than one would expect given the subject matter." - Ian
The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny
"Loved this book and the characters so much." - Amber
Genre Fiction
"The thing that came down from the mountains six months ago has fooled everyone. It has Indou Hikaru’s voice, face, and memories, but Yoshiki knows that the thing inhabiting that body- the body he saw, lying cold and stiff in the woods, isn’t *his* Hikaru. Still, having something by his side is better than having nothing at all. “Even if it’s not you, I don’t mind.” This is a queer coming-of-age story about repression, love, grief, and ultimately, acceptance and community– and it is the most powerful piece of fiction I’ve had the pleasure of reading in 2025. If you are a fan of queer stories, body horror, folkloric tradition, and unsettling, beautiful art, I cannot recommend this ongoing series enough." - Hannah
"One of my favorite graphic novel series ever. An adorably disturbing story of a girl who becomes trapped in a fairyland, which should be a delight, but as she spends 30+ years here, she ages mentally but is trapped in a 6-year-old body. She becomes more and more bitter, angry, and violent, wreaking chaos on Fairyland and its’ inhabitants." - Allison M.
"This masterwork of alternate history imagines a timeline where the Black Plague effectively wipes out Europe, destroying Christendom and repolarizing the global order along Muslim and Buddhist lines. Spanning centuries and continents, this towering narrative unfolds through lives reincarnated across many eras, including a concubine, a samurai, a Sufi mystic and an alchemist. As much as it is a feat of technical genius, it is also an exercise in a new poetics that draws from a galaxy of disparate voices and storytelling traditions that have seldom been the principal authors of history as we know it." - Ben
"I’ll never get tired of the setup the Strugatskys frequently use where a space traveler from a distant socialist Earth discovers a planet with a bunch of basically humans who are doing society wrong. Maxim is a himbo with a heart of gold." - Kevin
"This was a good year for dystopian fiction and I devoured this novella centering a world where civilization has collapsed, the earth’s environment is hostile, and cruelty is needed to stay alive. Super culty, super gritty, and terribly harrowing. Also any book about women trapped in and surviving hellish circumstances is a cathartic must-read for me!" - Christina
"Not sure if I’m disgusted or turned on." - Kevin
"I am admittedly an Alix E. Harrow Stan at this point, I had VERY high expectations for this, and it surpassed them. The themes of courage, symbolism, and love she explores are timeless, her use of language is pure poetry (I must've highlighted 100 sentences in this), and her characters always jump off the page and steal my heart, but none more so than Sir Una and Owen Mallory." - Leah
"A brand new take on the origin story of Medusa, the only mortal Gorgon, and her struggle with the gods." - Erica
"Smutty, gay, polyamorous VeggieTales fanfic. Hilarious. Hotter than I anticipated. Please don’t tell my mom I read this." - Allison M.
"Abercrombie has a way of creating characters that are both repulsive and lovable. This book is no exception. With a Church-commissioned team of vampires, werewolves, sorcerers, and pirates, this tale is Abercrombie at his finest. Witty, gritty and gory! A blend of First Law, Suicide Squad and The Exorcist." -Danno
"This profoundly moving story of sisters and sailing with reflections of humanity’s dysfunctions in the face of climate dystopia is eerily atmospheric and including a voyage-quest in search of their missing sister is somewhat reminiscent of The Morningside by Téa Obreht and also Dwelling by Emily Hunt Kivel." - Shirley
"You thought watching TV was bad for your brain. This book takes it to a whole different, gruesome level." - Erica
"Follows a young women with religious trauma as her grasp on faith falls away. The most accurate depiction I’ve found of the way religious guilt can follow you everywhere you go and create debilitating self-doubt. Incredibly healing story." - Allison M.
"Emily Hunt Kivel’s debut is reckoning with millennial angst. And she’s a big fan of fairytales, proclaiming this as a modern fable of late-stage capitalism. This tale transforms into a resilient heroine’s journey with found family as well as a surreal and rewarding adventure quest into creativity.
"The kind of book where I wish I could reexperience it the way I did the first time, over and over again. A group of women are imprisoned in a sort-of bunker that is policed by men who do not speak to them. The youngest of them has little to no memory of life before this, and none of them know why they’re here or what’s happening in the outside world. A disquieting and captivating book that really asks what makes life worth living." - Allison M.
"A young girl and her mother live in a woodsy cottage, waiting for lost hikers to pass by so they can satiate their strange hunger. This book was the most beautiful and gritty coming-of-age story of desire and cannibalism you’ll ever read. Trust me!" - Christina
"Frieren, an immortal(?) elf with a passion for collecting inconsequential magic spells, was once part of the group of legendary heroes who defeated the equally legendary Demon King. A century’s gone by and Frieren decides to retrace her journey. A gently funny, slow burn about finding meaning in the face of death (or in her case immortality). Particularly poignant if you grew up playing JRPGS like Dragon Quest or Final Fantasy." - Ian
"Hot queer lesbian magical realism baseball graphic novel, where some of them have baseball superpowers. I don’t even like sports but I am obsessed with this." - Allison M.
FUNDAMENTALS OF BEING A GOOD GIRL
"I had to choose this one because the authors are local and the romance is SPICY and the book is in a fictional Lawrence with a fictional KU! If you like strong heroines and competent heroes dealing with complicated situations instead of easily solved “self-inflicted dilemmas” (and did I mention SPICE?) get on hold for this book coming out in January. I love Sierra and Julie because they write great banter and funny situations and they are incredibly smart women who just happen to also champion naughty romance. I admit, it was also really enjoyable as a KU grad and longtime Lawrencian to try and suss out the locations and the little background stories and try to figure out where they got their inspiration from." - Polli
"Killing Stella is short and devastating. A domestic horror that forces you to look at the banality of evil right in the face, and despite first being published in 1958, it feels eerily relevant for the modern day." - Liz
"A stunningly illustrated story of a trans man who escapes his life as a nun by making an illicit deal with the actual devil. As he galivants around living a life of thievery (while looking quite fashionable), he encounters another transmasc living a similar lifestyle, and they begin to fall in love. It has pretty cozy vibes for a book with such a psychedelic/stained-glass art style." - Allison M.
"A much later read from this year, but some of the most fun I’ve had reading YA all year. Into the Dark is a Star Wars High Republic novel that takes place 200 years before The Phantom Menace. A Jedi Padawan must face an new enemy without the aid of his master. Along the way he partners with other Jedi and a rag-tag crew of a shipping vessel. The cast was charming and the book broke me out of a reading slump. It’s my favorite High Republic novel I’ve read so far." - Margo
Nonfiction
"Experimental, semi-auto-biographical novel about some actor named Jim Carrey. And also another A+ role for Nic Cage. Enjoyably bizarre. The audiobook is narrated by Jeff Daniels and is available through Libby." - Sean
"Author Angela Duckworth is fascinated by achievement, and has made a career out of studying people who have been successful in various arenas. There are many surprises in this book, the main being that resilient people have a lot in common, regardless of what they do or where they come from. Duckworth writes in a highly accessible style and includes many practical ideas to apply to one’s own activities, including parenting." - Dan C.
"You will never think of the US special forces the same way again. Equal parts true crime thriller and polemic set in the imperial core of post-9/11 America, this investigation into the domestic activities of drug-addled, ultraviolent JSOC operatives could only be carried out by Harp, a combat veteran and clear-eyed witness to the degeneracy of the most lethal and reckless wing of the US military ever produced." - Ben
Why We Love (and Hate) Twilight
"For all the Twihards out there who have come to love and hate twilight, this book is a fantastic read! Sara Elizabeth Gallagher dives into all things Twilight from the books to the movies and discusses the nuances of the fandom and all the weird storylines Stephanie Meyer included and expanded upon in supplemental materials that leave us scratching our heads and wondering how these books got published in the first place. Prepare to feel the urge to either read or watch Twilight when you’ve finished with this one because it will be very strong and you might just force your loved ones to suffer through Twilight with you." - Mary
"This book is full of important history I’d never learned before and is an inspiring reminder of the power of education and community. Weiss also provides an interesting look at how leaders responded to the Brown v. Topeka Board of Education and how the decision impacted the civil rights movement as a whole." - Liz
"If you’re looking to increase your reading time in 2026, this is a great book to pick up because it’s really a series of essays. They can be digested one or two at a time and it makes for great bedtime or coffee time reading. John Green is known for his wit and his heartfelt writing, and you’ll get both of those in abundance in The Anthropocene Reviewed. In it, John discusses his experience with and then gives a rating to various aspects of “The Anthropocene” – Diet Dr. Pepper. Viral Meningitis. Canada Geese. Sunsets. Super Mario Kart. In all, there are 44 essays and each one is interesting and complex and inspires us to all “pay attention to what we pay attention to”. Green wrote this book at points during the pandemic, so it’s also a little time capsule of what we were thinking and feeling then, which I finally appreciated revisiting. This would be a great book to co-read with someone (or many, as our RAL book!) and to really have a conversation about what it means to be human, what it means to be in community with other humans. It was a hug of a book." - Polli
"Kuleana is an Indigenous Hawaiian word meaning both responsibility and privilege. This inspired memoir celebrates family, wild lands, and Indigenous Hawaiian culture while also reckoning with land loss, and the economic challenges of property taxes from rising real estate values. Most Indigenous Hawaiians cannot afford to live on the Island. And many Hawaiians who are living on the Island are house-less." - Shirley
"A broad indictment of Spotify. But there’s a lot more to this book than that. Passages about how we got from walkmen and mixtapes to AI-generated playlists, and considerations for music’s changing role in culture make this book a much more thoughtful experience (and less than 300 pages)." - Sean
Fireflies, Glow-worms, and Lightning Bugs
"I’m addicted to field guides, and Faust’s is the gold standard for fireflies in the U.S. I didn’t read it cover to cover, but it’s a joy just to spend a little time with, full of amazing color photos and notes from the author, who has spent her life researching and documenting fireflies. Her story is the subject of a non-fiction children’s book published this year called Firefly Song, by Colleen Paeff, which was another favorite. Lynn Frierson Faust became obsessed with fireflies as a child on annual visits to an area which became part of the Great Smoky Mountain National Park, trained herself as a naturalist and became one of the world’s experts on fireflies (she literally “wrote the book” referred to above). As explained in the children’s book about her, she was able to prove the existence of a certain type of firefly in the United States which the scientific community had previously believed was not here, but which she knew she had seen with her own eyes as a child." - Dan C.
"Macfarlane’s work is a wilderness adventure quest! I am spellbound in succinct lyrical phrases, such as: “The moon path flutters in the current.” The title is a rhetorical question; his passion of the greater-than-human living world is on par with his skill and agility to turn a phrase. And listening to the author narrate his adventures and introduce friends and fellow advocates is sweetly endearing." - Shirley
"A Rare Book Collector’s Quest to Find the Women Writers Who Shaped A Legend by Rebecca Romney—I absolutely loved this book collector’s deep dive into the women writers who inspired our beloved Jane Austen. This book gives excellent bibliographical accounts of 18th century writers from gothic fiction pioneer Ann Radcliffe to playwright Elizabeth Inchbald. I mean what Austen fan wouldn’t be curious about the beloved books she kept on her own bookshelves?!" - Christina
"Fascinating." - Kevin
"As satisfying as it is to follow a writer as they take to task the popular myths and delusions of Western history, nothing could have prepared me for the scale and rigor of this exceptional survey of the New World. The two Americas in question are the outcomes of the British and Spanish colonial projects that displaced and destroyed native societies while simultaneously introducing a massive slave population. Grandin tells the story of their growth and decay over the following centuries with dazzling efficiency, turning every stone to reveal that the history of American empire is not the monolith it seems." - Ben
"This is the beautiful, modern, perfectly written quilting guide I wish I had when I was a newbie. Even as a more experienced quilter now, I gleefully read it cover to cover and I’m making some of the gorgeous included patterns." - Liz
The Woman They Could Not Silence
"Elizabeth Packard is a wife and mother to 6 children in the 1860’s, as the Civil War starts to erupt she finds herself at odds with her husband on both political and religious issues. He deems her insane and has her committed to an asylum for being too opinionated. Here she finds that many of the women housed inside are also there because of their husband’s wishes and takes it upon herself to correct these wrongs. A wonderful exploration into the rights of women and how one woman kept fighting for herself and others to change things. Kate Moore has this way of reciting history that absolutely mesmerizes you, if you liked her previous work, Radium Girls, you will love this one just as much if not more." - Mary
—Leah Newton is a Readers' Services Technician at Lawrence Public Library.

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