The Eunice Public Library releases its new books for October.
Adult Fiction
“Gateway Weddings,” by Myra Johnson; “Aloha Brides,” by Yvonne Lehman; “Mark of the Witch (Large Print),” by Maggie Shayne; “To Be Where You Are,” by Jan Karon; “The Wednesday Letters,” by Jason F. Wright; “Feel The Burn,” by G.A. Aiken; “Before the Dawn,” by Cynthia Eden; “The River,” by Beverly Lewis; “The Ebb Tide,” by Beverly Lewis; “The Memory Weaver,” by Jane Kirkpatrick; “The Storyteller,” by Jodi Picoult; “Trespass,” by Valerie Martin; “Sage Creek,” by Jill Gregory; “The Worthy: A Ghost’s Story,” by Will Clarke; “See Me,” by Nicholas Sparks; “No Man’s Land,” by David Baldacci; “Local Girl Missing,” by Claire Douglas; “Never Never,” by James Patterson.
Young Adult Fiction
“Silence,” by Becca Fitzpatrick; “The Kill Order,” by James Dashner; “Suddenly Supernatural,” by Elizabeth Kimmel; “Something Like Fate,” by Susane Colasanti.
Juvenile Fiction
“Nile Crossing,” by Kathy Beebe; “A Dog’s Life: An Autobiography of a Stray,” by Ann M. Martin; “Smoke,” by Mavis Jukes.
“In Memory of Amber Kristen Lee Soileau,” by Robert P. Lee.
“It by Stephen King; Come Sundown,” by Nora Roberts; “The Good Daughter,” by Karin Slaughter; “Against All Odds,” by Danielle Steel; “Standard Deviation,” by Katherine Heiny; “The Silent Wife,” by Kerry Fisher; “As Time Goes By,” by Mary Higgins Clark; “The Breakdown,” by B.A. Paris; “Any Dream Will Do,” by Debbie Macomber; “Paradise Valley,” by C.J. Box; “Arrival,” by Chris Morphew; “Contact ,” by Chris Morphew; “Froggy In the Band,” by London Johnathan; “I Got the Rhythm,” by Connie Schofield-Morrison; “Junie B. Jones is a Beauty Shop Guy,” by Barbara Park; “Junie B. Jones Smells Something Fishy,” by Barbara Park; “Junie B. Jones is a Party Animal,” by Barbara Park; “Junie B. Jones Is Not a Crook,” by Barbara Park; “Junie B. Jones Loves Handsome Warren,” by Barbara Park; “Junie B. Jones Has a Monster Under Her Bed,” by Barbara Park; “Junie B. Jones and That Meanie Jim’s Birthday,” by Barbara Park; :Junie B. Jones and the Yucky Blucky Fruitcake”; “The Children Who Loved Books,” by Peter Carnavas.