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1Prince of Wolves (The Grey Wolves, #1)
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4.05 avg rating — 32,620 ratings
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2UnEnchanted (An Unfortunate Fairy Tale, #1)
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3.89 avg rating — 38,982 ratings
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3Blood Money
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3.93 avg rating — 74 ratings
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4The Fallen Star (Fallen Star, #1)
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3.91 avg rating — 27,342 ratings
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5Orange is my favorite color!
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4.67 avg rating — 12 ratings
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6Ignite (Midnight Fire, #1)
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3.87 avg rating — 7,670 ratings
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7Maid for the Billionaire (Legacy Collection, #1)
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3.78 avg rating — 18,226 ratings
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8Blood Rites (The Grey Wolves, #2)
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4.41 avg rating — 19,475 ratings
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9Twilight (Twilight, #1)
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3.59 avg rating — 4,435,885 ratings
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10Hollowland (The Hollows, #1)
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3.96 avg rating — 17,627 ratings
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11Awakened (Vampire Awakenings, #1)
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3.78 avg rating — 14,326 ratings
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12Turned (Book #1 in the Vampire Journals)
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3.40 avg rating — 12,074 ratings
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13Nandana's Mark (Queen of the Realm of Faerie, #1)
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3.52 avg rating — 165 ratings
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14Insight (Insight #1; Web of Hearts and Souls #1)
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3.79 avg rating — 5,520 ratings
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15Clockwise (Clockwise, #1)
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3.84 avg rating — 4,524 ratings
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16The Mind Readers (Mind Readers, #1)
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3.76 avg rating — 17,983 ratings
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17Eternal Eden (Eden Trilogy, #1)
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3.78 avg rating — 12,598 ratings
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18Marked (Soul Guardians, #1)
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3.70 avg rating — 6,292 ratings
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19City of Bones (The Mortal Instruments, #1)
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4.11 avg rating — 1,444,299 ratings
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20Bound (Arelia LaRue, #1)
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3.79 avg rating — 6,202 ratings
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21Discovering You
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4.01 avg rating — 613 ratings
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22Promise (Soul Savers, #1)
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3.97 avg rating — 7,971 ratings
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23Beautiful Demons (The Shadow Demons Saga #1; Peachville High Demons #1)
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3.84 avg rating — 8,678 ratings
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24The Deepest Cut (MacKinnon Curse, #1)
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3.99 avg rating — 7,214 ratings
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25Earth (Elemental, #1)
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3.74 avg rating — 1,590 ratings
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26Meant to Be (The Saving Angels, #1)
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3.73 avg rating — 5,373 ratings
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27Five (Elemental Enmity, #1)
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3.79 avg rating — 2,156 ratings
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28Bound to Remember (Spellbound, #1)
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3.37 avg rating — 707 ratings
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29The Soulkeepers (The Soulkeepers, #1)
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3.72 avg rating — 14,718 ratings
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30Darkness Falls (Darkness Falls, #1)
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3.81 avg rating — 5,369 ratings
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31Almost Perfect (Perfect Trilogy, #1)
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3.68 avg rating — 4,840 ratings
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31Awakening (The Watchers, #1)
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3.67 avg rating — 6,343 ratings
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33Jenny Pox (The Paranormals, #1)
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3.63 avg rating — 7,424 ratings
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34Brightest Kind of Darkness (Brightest Kind of Darkness #1)
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3.92 avg rating — 6,782 ratings
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35Starfire Angels (Starfire Angels: Dark Angel Chronicles, #1)
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3.74 avg rating — 3,821 ratings
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35Broken (Reflections #1)
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3.60 avg rating — 3,013 ratings
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37The Soulkeepers (The Soulkeepers, #1)
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3.72 avg rating — 14,718 ratings
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38Reckless Magic (Star-Crossed, #1)
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really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 11,921 ratings
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39ePulp Sampler Vol 1
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3.59 avg rating — 41 ratings
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40Irresistible Forces (Forged of Steele, #5)
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3.73 avg rating — 8,612 ratings
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40Bookee and Keeboo search for a chicken
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4.09 avg rating — 11 ratings
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42Beautiful Creatures (Caster Chronicles, #1)
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3.76 avg rating — 503,370 ratings
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43Valor (Greystone, #1)
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3.87 avg rating — 1,199 ratings
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44Dangerous (Element Preservers, #1)
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3.84 avg rating — 1,888 ratings
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45Fatal Affair (Fatal, #1)
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4.14 avg rating — 11,833 ratings
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46The Hunger Games (The Hunger Games, #1)
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4.33 avg rating — 5,742,238 ratings
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47Bound (Arelia LaRue, #1)
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3.79 avg rating — 6,202 ratings
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48Shimmerspell (The Shimmer Trilogy, #1)
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3.48 avg rating — 979 ratings
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49Survival (The Guardians of Vesturon, #1)
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3.78 avg rating — 1,658 ratings
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50Pride and Prejudice
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4.25 avg rating — 2,582,588 ratings
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51Bridesmaid Lotto (McMaster the Disaster, #1)
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3.58 avg rating — 9,290 ratings
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52Madly (Madly, #1)
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3.77 avg rating — 2,778 ratings
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53Witches 101: A Witches of East End Primer
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3.49 avg rating — 1,022 ratings
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54Golden Blood (Time Spirit Trilogy, #1)
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3.81 avg rating — 1,766 ratings
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55Frey (The Frey Saga, #1)
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3.59 avg rating — 5,274 ratings
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56Become (Desolation, #1)
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3.64 avg rating — 1,821 ratings
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57Glamour (Rae Wilder, #1)
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3.57 avg rating — 6,455 ratings
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58Beginnings (The Guardians of Vesturon, #0.5)
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3.96 avg rating — 462 ratings
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59A Job From Hell (Ancient Legends, #1)
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3.55 avg rating — 7,993 ratings
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60Branded (Fall of Angels, #1)
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3.71 avg rating — 16,229 ratings
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61Arrows Across Eons: Becoming Tina Turner
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4.67 avg rating — 40 ratings
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62No Dogs in Philly (Special Sin #1)
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3.51 avg rating — 184 ratings
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63Water (Akasha, #1)
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3.33 avg rating — 1,916 ratings
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64Clockwork Angel (The Infernal Devices, #1)
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4.33 avg rating — 590,033 ratings
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65Rippler (Ripple, #1)
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3.69 avg rating — 3,699 ratings
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66City of Glass (The Mortal Instruments, #3)
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4.33 avg rating — 719,906 ratings
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67The Bane Chronicles
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4.18 avg rating — 58,073 ratings
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68For the Love of a Vampire (Blood Like Poison, #1)
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3.83 avg rating — 6,822 ratings
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6944 (44 #1)
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3.65 avg rating — 4,155 ratings
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70The Pearl Savage (Savage, #1)
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3.64 avg rating — 1,472 ratings
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70Bound (The Crystor, #1)
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3.91 avg rating — 2,882 ratings
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72Ethereal (Celestra, #1)
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3.75 avg rating — 13,522 ratings
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73Night Marchers (Night Marchers, #1)
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3.63 avg rating — 2,089 ratings
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74Thirst (Ava Delaney, #1)
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3.76 avg rating — 5,711 ratings
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75The Trouble with Spells (Of Witches and Warlocks, #1)
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3.87 avg rating — 4,606 ratings
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75Gravity (Gravity, #1)
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3.80 avg rating — 3,029 ratings
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75Tempest (Destroyers, #1)
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3.60 avg rating — 1,889 ratings
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78Wander Dust (The Seraphina Parrish Trilogy, #1)
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3.75 avg rating — 2,556 ratings
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79Shadow of the Sun (Timeless, #1)
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3.76 avg rating — 1,123 ratings
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80The Vampire Hunter's Daughter (The Vampire Hunter's Daughter #1)
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3.68 avg rating — 2,839 ratings
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81Stained (Stained, #1)
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3.70 avg rating — 7,001 ratings
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82The Initiate (The Song of Eloh Saga, #1; Cloud Prophet Trilogy, #0.5)
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3.73 avg rating — 523 ratings
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83Birthrights (The Awakening Trilogy #1)
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3.75 avg rating — 935 ratings
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84Shaken and Stirred
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3.30 avg rating — 842 ratings
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84The Voodoo Follies
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4.44 avg rating — 18 ratings
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86The Moon was Watching
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3.36 avg rating — 28 ratings
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86The Shelter
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3.45 avg rating — 320 ratings
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86Quotes and Poems
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4.33 avg rating — 3 ratings
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86Abstragraphy
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0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings
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86The Bro Code
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3.73 avg rating — 9,350 ratings
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86Bookee and Keeboo Play in the Snow
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0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings
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86Right-Hearted: Finding What's Right With a Wrong-Sided Heart
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3.72 avg rating — 60 ratings
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86Yellow Eyes (The Guardian Saga, #1)
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3.39 avg rating — 23 ratings
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86Dancing with Deception (Dancing, #0.5)
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3.54 avg rating — 85 ratings
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86In the Cleft Joy Comes In the Mourning: A Story of Hope After Tragedy
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4.63 avg rating — 30 ratings
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86Pacific Cold: A Short Story
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it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 1 rating
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86Cerulean Rising: Beginnings (Cerulean Rising #1)
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3.83 avg rating — 29 ratings
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86The Legend of the Blue Eyes (Blue Eyes Trilogy #1)
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3.82 avg rating — 3,131 ratings
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86The French Love Pastry and Her Tale in the Sand: A Dip into the Byblos Foretold Novaplex
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3.11 avg rating — 9 ratings
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86Where Did My Life Go?: A Towering Experience
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3.60 avg rating — 5 ratings
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Remember when Presidents spoke in complete sentences instead of unhinged tweets? Former Obama speechwriter David Litt reflects on a time when fact-checking was an integral part of Whitehouse protocol, climate change was acknowledged as a real thing, and presidents not only turned up to the White House Correspondents’ Dinners—they also performed comic skits with Keegan-Michael Key. In this candid memoir, Litt brings us inside Obamaworld, recalling the electrifying moment he discovered Obama and how he arrived at the White House at 24 years-old (one of the youngest White House speechwriters in history) to eventually become Obama’s go-to comedy writer. We get an inside look into politics as it was under the former administration, and we discover why Litt believes the legacy of Barack Obama will prevail long after the age of Donald Trump.
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Dear Tim Cook: Do you even read books, bro?

Now that iOS 12 has been released in public beta, non-developers are getting their first look at the next-generation operating system for iPhone and iPad. And one of the most anticipated aspects of iOS 12, at least for an e-bibliophile like myself, is the Apple Books app, formerly known as iBooks.

Hands-on previews with Books have done the rounds already. But they all looked at Apple's built-in library, which is minimal. I couldn't wait to see how it handled a real reading situation, with a serious pre-existing collection — especially given that I'd had troubles with iBooks and my 1,600-plus e-book library in the recent past. So I downloaded the beta, fully aware I'd be dealing with bugs.

SEE ALSO: iOS 12 preview: Serious upgrades to security, speed, and smarts

The good news is I found fewer bugs than expected, and that Apple Books has some usability improvements over iBooks. The bad news is when it's working as intended, Books still seems like an app built more for show than for serious readers.

Which leads me to wonder whether the Apple CEO is genuinely invested in the literary category — or whether he's just treating Books as another opportunity to sell stuff (the Books store is much more prominent in the new app) or as window-dressing for his big education push.

Luckily, the problem can be solved with a few crucial design tweaks. There's still time to make Books great before iOS 12 officially launches in the fall. Here's hoping Cook actually cares.

How to lose the e-book wars

I've been an iBooks booster ever since the first version of the app launched, alongside the original iPad, in 2010. Here at last was a device and an e-bookstore that could challenge the dominance of Amazon and its Kindle, which was then three years old.

We forget now how much energy Steve Jobs expended selling that groundbreaking tablet as an e-reader. The iBooks app was front and center on launch day.

Apple was going to change the e-reading game, and for a hot minute it did. It allowed you to upload EPUB files, the open format for e-books, while Amazon preferred proprietary formats like MOBI. (It was easier to strip the DRM out of Kindle books than Apple-bought books, but paradoxically that just let you read Kindle purchases on iBooks rather than the other way around.)

When iBooks 3 launched in 2012 alongside the iPad Mini, it added continuous scrolling for all books, a feature I raved about at the time. It took Amazon until March this year to add scrolling to the Kindle app, and even now it's only available for books you buy on Amazon.

The final straw came when my iPad started deleting books

But in the post-Jobs era, iBooks fell behind. Amazon had Whispersync, a feature that let you pick up a book exactly where you left off, no matter which Kindle device or app you were using. Seems like a key feature, right? Like something Apple could manage easily with iCloud?

Nope: iBooks only ever synced bookmarks. You had to remember to bookmark the page you were on when putting down your iPad if you wanted to pick it up later on the iPhone. Ain't nobody got time for that.

The amazing disappearing iBooks

At last, in 2016, Apple let you store your iBooks library in the cloud. But even that feature wasn't all it was cracked up to be — as I learned when my iPad started mysteriously deleting downloaded versions of most of my iBooks, making them iCloud only.

I'd still see the titles in my library, but no matter how many times I tapped the cloud icon next to each — this was another truly annoying feature, the fact that you had to download each book literally one by one — the cloud icon would reappear next to the book a few hours or days later. They were gone from my device, again.

This was like a high-tech, no-fun game of whack-a-mole.

Call me old-fashioned, but I like to have my entire e-library actually with me at all times — for reading on a plane, or reading on a beach far from WiFi or cell service, or reading with a solar-powered charger after some future apocalypse. (And if we break our glasses we can always increase the font size. In your face, Twilight Zone!)

What was truly disturbing about the iBooks disappearances was that nobody in my local Apple Store or on the Apple Support phone line could tell me what was going on. Finally, with the help of some engineers, I discovered that this was supposed to be a feature, rather than a bug: My iPad had less than 5GB of room on it, so it was actively trying to free up space ... by deleting books.

You read that right: In an unnecessary, unrequested hunt for an extra gigabyte or two, iOS considered books (which average a mere 500 kilobytes each) to be expendable. No matter how many times you would try to re-download them, they would be tossed into the memory hole.

George Orwell himself could not make this shit up.

Enter Apple Books

I'd been gravitating towards Amazon anyway, reluctantly, but the iBooks deletion situation was the last straw. This year, for the first time since 2010, Kindle became my only reading app.

Then we learned just prior to Apple's WWDC keynote that a new version of Books would be touted. Would it hold a candle to Kindle?

The amount of time devoted to Books in the keynote was not encouraging. Apple News, Stocks, and even the Voice Memo app were deemed more important. Apple Books was literally discussed for less than a minute, much of which time was devoted to the dropping of the 'i.'

SEE ALSO: Apple doesn't need new hardware — it's going to make you buy everything it sells

Best free books to download on ibooks

Why so little attention for a major upgrade to a medium that is more important in the Trump era than ever? Were books just too unhip for the company that bought Beats, a company that is perpetually over-eager to appear on the cultural cutting edge? Was it the embarrassing legacy of a rare business defeat inflicted by Amazon, or the open wound of a lawsuit that led Apple to pay out $400 million in 2016 for colluding on prices with publishers in the iBooks store?

Free Books

Regardless, I still had hope. And that hope was somewhat vindicated when I took my first look at the iOS 12 beta. (Which, by the way, has generally improved the speed and performance of my ancient iPhone 6S, as promised. Nice one, Apple!)

Open the Books app and you're met with 'Reading Now,' a neat way to have the option of diving into your current book or having a look at another. Both Kindle and iBooks load the last book you were reading automatically, which can get annoying if you read the way I do (with a dozen books on the go at any one time).

Most prominent after that is 'Want to Read,' i.e. books you've found interesting in the Apple Book Store. Sheesh, Apple, I know you're trying to sell books, but could you maybe be a little more subtle about it?

The Collections screen, above, offers a slightly more useful way to organize your library (collections were previously listed in a drop-down menu rather than their own screen). And it's nice that Audiobooks get their own section for the first time, although I still wonder why Apple decided to make Audiobooks part of iBooks years ago. They used to be part of iTunes, which seems a more natural fit despite the name: It's a thing you want to access when you feel like listening to something.

But here's the main problem: You still have to download every book one by one. Do the math based on the 'downloaded' number on the screen above and you'll see I still have to tap more than 1,400 times before I've acquired and apocalypse-proofed my collection.

This is, in a word, nuts. Amazon lets you download each Kindle collection with a single tap. Apple Music, formerly iTunes, lets you download each playlist with a single tap. Why does Apple want to make it so hard for us to manage our libraries? Don't they realize we'd be more interested in the Book Store if we were happy and secure in the thing we'd be adding those books to?

Or to put it more bluntly, is no one in an Apple executive suite a big e-book reader themselves?

In terms of the disappearing books problem, so far so good. Then again, the iPhone I'm using to test iOS 12 has way more space available, so iOS's book-deleting instinct won't have kicked in yet. Once the new iOS is officially launched this fall, I'll be back with a full review of Books — and I'll find out whether Apple has finally caught up to Amazon on the Whispersync front.

But in the meantime, there's still time for Apple to add one more simple feature to Books — a 'Download Collection' button. This would go a long way towards winning back the estranged and Kindle-loving customers, especially the ones who have filled their e-readers with hundreds of books and would be looking to port them over.

After all, Apple goes out of its way to embrace Android users and make switching systems easy. Shouldn't they make just as much effort to grab Amazon customers?

Your move, Tim.