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Book Chat Bags

TMissoula Public Library Book Chat Bagsen copies of a book plus discussion questions, author information,reviews and more in a handy tote bag. Choose from over 100 fiction and non-fiction titles.

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Art of Racing in the Rain
Written by Stein, Garth   
Sunday, 22 April 2012 14:58
A dog is a man’s best friend. Stein’s novel investigates this well-known saying from the perspective of Enzo, a lab terrier mix owned by race car Driver Denny Swift. As Denny’s life takes a difficult turn, Enzo must stand by his side.
 
Beautiful Ruins
Written by Walter, Jess   
Monday, 18 March 2013 12:47
In 1962, a young Italian innkeeper falls in love with an American actress who's presence in his small town is related to a disaster on the set of the film Cleopatra. Fifty years later, he travels to Hollywood to try to track down the woman he cannot forget.
 
Blind Your Ponies
Written by West, Stanley Gordon   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:19

Sam Pickett moves to the quite village of Willow Creek, Montana to escape his past. He discovers a community of outlandish characters that have their own tales of heartache and broken dreams to tell as well. Together they must begin to embrace life and live their lives to the fullest.

 
Blood and Chocolate
Written by Klause, Annette Curtis   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:43

This violent, sexy novel is a seamless, convincing blend of fantasy and reality that can be read as feminist fiction, smoldering romance, rites-of-passage novel, or a piercing reflection on human nature. Vivian is tough yet vulnerable, a werewolf trying to fit into the suburbs, and falling in love with a human, but drawn ultimately into her true fate. Young Adult.

 
Book Thief
Written by Zusak, Markus   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:21

The narrator of The Book Thief, Death, tells the story of a young girl in Nazi Germany who discovers the power of words and books while she struggles to cope with the loss of her family and with the horrors around her.

 
Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao
Written by Diaz, Junot   
Monday, 28 February 2011 20:12

A fukú curse has followed Oscar’s family for generations, all the way from the Dominican Republic to New Jersey. While Oscar, an “overweight ghetto nerd” living with his mother and sister, dreams of becoming a writer and falling in love, the fukú may ruin it all.

 
Caleb's Crossing
Written by Brooks, Geraldine   
Tuesday, 19 February 2013 16:23

In 1665, Caleb Cheeshahteaumauk became the first Native American to graduate from Harvard. This novel imagines his tale as told by Bethia Mayfield, the bright and intellectually curious daughter of a Martha's Vineyard preacher who takes Caleb into his family's home to convert and educate him.

* Donated by the Jocko Valley Book Club

 
Call of the Wild
Written by London, Jack   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:49

During the Klondike Gold Rush, a domesticated dog named Buck is kidnapped from his home and taken to the Yukon territory as a sled dog, where he must learn to adapt to harsh conditions and reawaken instincts for surviving in the wild. Young Adult.

 
Case Histories
Written by Atkinson, Kate   
Friday, 31 December 2010 07:14

Three unsolved cases fall into the lap of private eye Jackson Brody, an ex-cop who empathizes with his clients as he mourns the break up of his marriage and separation from his daughter.

 
Cat's Table
Written by Ondaatje, Michael   
Sunday, 16 December 2012 13:52
From the award-winning author of The English Patient comes the tale of an eleven-year-old boy on a ship headed for England in the 1950s. The crossing introduces him to jazz, women, literature, and a worId full of mystery and adventure, setting the course for an unexpexted lifelong journey.
 
Cutting for Stone
Written by Verghese, Abraham   
Monday, 28 February 2011 20:11

Marion and Shiva Stone are twin brothers born of a secret union between a beautiful Indian nun and a brash British surgeon. Orphaned by their mother’s death and their father’s disappearance, bound together by a preternatural connection and a shared fascination with medicine, the twins come of age as Ethiopia hovers on the brink of revolution.

 
Elegance of the Hedgehog
Written by Barbery, Muriel   
Friday, 29 July 2011 14:20
While Renée appears to be a cranky, uneducated Parisian apartment concierge, she is actually a cultured connoisseur of art, philosophy, and music. Twelve-year-old tenant Paloma is also not what she appears and has decided to end her life on her thirteenth birthday. When a Japanease man named Ozu moves in to one of the apartments, Renée and Paloma’s talents are finally brought to light.
 
Faithful Place
Written by French, Tana   
Tuesday, 19 February 2013 16:00

At nineteen, Frank Mackey and his girlfriend Rosie planned to run away to England, leaving their poor Dublin neighborhood behind. Rosie never showed up and Frank assumed she left without him. Over twenty years later, Frank, now a cop and head of the Dublin undercover unit, learns that Rosie's suitcase has been uncovered in his old neighborhood and he must return to find out what really happened that night.

 
Flight
Written by Alexie, Sherman   
Wednesday, 22 December 2010 15:44

Fifteen-year-old Zits is out for revenge. An abused foster child whose father never claimed him, Zits attempts to take out his anger and pain on a group of innocent bystanders, but is catapulted into a series of time-traveling adventures instead.

 
Fobbit
Written by Abrams, David   
Monday, 18 March 2013 12:19

This darkly humourus debut novel provides a satirical view of the Iraq war as seen through the eyes of "fobbits," or public affairs soldiers working in a Forward Operating Base (FOB) west of Baghdad. Based on the author's own experience stationed on a FOB in Iraq. A 2012 Montana Book Award Honor book.


 
Freedom
Written by Franzen, Jonathan   
Tuesday, 19 February 2013 15:46
Living in St. Paul, Minnesota, the Berglund family appeared to be the ideal family - good neighbors, attentive parents, and happy children. Then the Berglund son moves in with the family next door and hidden longings, secrets, and failures reveal the imperfections of a family trying to navigate a complex modern world.
 
Gathering
Written by Enright, Anne   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:33

When Liam Hegarty drowns, his nine siblings come together in Dublin, Ireland for the wake. One of those siblings must continue to keep a secret only she and Liam shared. Winner of the 2007 Man Booker Prize, The Gathering is a novel about family and memory, loss and love.

 
Glaciers
Written by Smith, Alexis M.   
Monday, 11 March 2013 11:33

Smith's debut novel follows Isabel over the course of one day in the city of Portland, OR. A lover of books and all things vintage, Isabel works in the basement of a library repairing books. When Isabel purchases an old postcard from Amsterdam at a junk shop and works up the courage to invite coworker "Spoke" to a party, her life will turn in a completely different direction.

*Donated by the WEST OF WYE  Book Club

 
Go Ask Alice
Written by Anonymous   
Friday, 31 December 2010 07:12

A teen’s out-of-control journey into drugs is recorded in her journal. Published anonymously, Go Ask Alice is now a classic, and under scrutiny for its authenticity. Young Adult.

 
Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society
Written by Shaffer, Amry Ann and Annie Barrows   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:15

It is 1946 and British author Juliet Ashton is looking to distance herself from her war-time, “look on the bright side” alter ego Izzy Bickerstaff. When a farmer on the island of Guernsey writes to Juliet, the story of Guernsey life under German occupation and the mystery of the Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society begin to unfold, sending Juliet on a journey in search of her next book.

 
Hattie Big Sky
Written by Larson, Kirby   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:48

Set in 1918, a 16-year-old orphan named Hattie Brooks sets off for Montana to build a new life and take over a homestead left to her by her uncle. Winner of the 2006 Montana Book Award, selected as a 2007 Newberry Honor Book, and chosen for the 2008 One Book Montana title. Young Adult.

 
Heartsong of Charging Elk
Written by Welch, James   
Thursday, 16 June 2011 12:36

Having rejected the restrictions of reservation life, Oglala Sioux Charging Elk joins Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show, journeying from South Dakota to Marseille France in the late 1800’s. When the show leaves him behind in a hospital after a serious injury, Charging Elk must try to make his way in a foreign land with no common language or culture to assist him. Should he hold on to his past, or adapt to life in a new land?

 
Help
Written by Stockett, Kathryn   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:17

Stockett’s debut novel features the interwoven narratives of three Mississippi women in 1962: one, a young, white aspiring writer investigating the disappearance of her family’s black maid, the other two, black maids struggling with hardships at work and home. All three will be forced to make a decision that will change their lives and community forever.

 
Historian
Written by Kostova, Elizabeth   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:44

In this twist on the traditional Dracula story, a young girl discovers a mysterious book from her father’s past. The book holds clues connecting the disappearance of a professor with Dracula, but before the girl’s father can explain, he too vanishes.

 
Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet
Written by Ford, Jamie   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:34

Ford's debut novel follows Chinese-American Henry Lee in mid-1980s Seattle. After learning that the belongings of Japanese Americans interned during WWII have been discovered in the basement of a hotel, he retraces the experiences of his youth and his first love, Keiko Okabe, who was interned with her family during the war.

 
House of Spirits
Written by Allende, Isabel   
Friday, 31 December 2010 07:10

Internationally acclaimed Chilean author Isabel Allende’s first novel follows the saga of the Truebas family in an unnamed South American country. The viewpoint shifts between the proud patriarch, mystical matriarch, the daughter who has a forbidden love affair, and the child born from that affair.

 
Housekeeping
Written by Robinson, Marilynne   
Thursday, 11 August 2011 16:02
Pulitzer Prize-winner Robinson’s poetic first novel has been named one of the 100 greatest novels of all time. Two sisters are raised by an eccentric collection of relatives in Idaho, taking very different life paths as they come of age and try to cope with their past.
 
Hunger Games
Written by Collins, Suzanne   
Monday, 18 March 2013 11:42
After volunteering to take her younger sister’s place in a televised competition used by the rulers of Panem to control residents of the Districts, sixteen-year-old Katniss Everdeen must win the Hunger Games, or die trying. The first of a trilogy, this action-packed dystopian novel does not fail to thrill.
 
Imperfectionists
Written by Rachman, Tom   
Monday, 28 February 2011 20:10

Rachman's debut novel follows the private lives of reporters, editors, and executives of an international English language newspaper based in Rome as they struggle to keep it—and themselves—afloat. At turns funny and sad, each chapter could stand alone as a short story.

 
Inheritance of Loss
Written by Desai, Kiran   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:28

A judge attempting peaceful retirement in a Himalayan village must share his home with his newly orphaned granddaughter. Their cook is concerned for his son, an illegal alien living in New York City and all three must brace themselves as political unrest takes over the region

 
Interpreter of Maladies
Written by Lahiri, Jhumpa   
Tuesday, 19 February 2013 16:34

This collection of short stories, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 2000, investigates the cultural and generational divides experienced by modern Indian immigrants and their more Americanized children.

*Donated by the First Monday Book Club

 
Jesus Out to Sea
Written by Burke, James Lee   
Saturday, 28 July 2012 12:36
Burke, author of the celebrated Dave Robicheaux mystery series, splits his time between Montana’s Bitterroot Valley and New Orleans and these are just two of the very different settings represented in the 11 short stories of Jesus Out to Sea. These powerful stories touch on themes such as war, poverty, and the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
 
Last Crossing
Written by Vanderhaeghe, Guy   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:19

Sent to the United States by their father to search for their missing brother, two Englishmen journey to Fort Benton and enlist the help of a half Blackfoot, half Scot guide named Jerry Potts to take them into the wilderness where their brother was last seen. An epic tale of adventure and redemption, The Last Crossing was the 2007 One Book Montana selection.

 
Last Good Kiss
Written by Crumley, James   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:27

Hard-boiled, Montana detective C.W. Sughrue is killing time working in a topless bar. When he is hired to find an author, he stumbles upon the trail of a missing girl and sets off on a journey across the American West.

 
Last Queen
Written by Gortner, C.W.   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:38

At 16, Princess Juana of Castile is sent away from Spain by her parents, Queen Isabel and King Ferdinand, to marry Philip of Flanders and increase the family’s favor with the Hapsburg Empire. Years later, Juana must return to Spain amidst tragedy and turmoil as the next in line for the Spanish crown.

 
Let the Great World Spin
Written by McCann, Colum   
Monday, 28 February 2011 20:12

In August 1974, a tightrope walker successfully walks between the Twin Towers and the seemingly disparate lives of stunned observers become entwined in a portrait of New York City and the people who live there.

 
Life of Pi
Written by Martel, Yann   
Tuesday, 16 October 2012 14:39
Pi Patel grows up in Pondicherry India amidst the noise and excitement of his father’s zoo. When the family and zoo board a ship to emigrate to Canada, the ship sinks over the Pacific leaving only five survivors in a lifeboat: Pi, a hyena, a zebra, an orang-utan, and a Royal Bengal tiger. Pi must find the will and courage to stay at the top of the food chain in order to survive. Winner of the Man Booker Prize.
 
Light Between Oceans
Written by Stedman, M.L.   
Tuesday, 19 February 2013 16:09

Returning to Australia after World War I, Tom Shebourne takes a job as a lighthouse keeper on a remote island, marrying Isobel and bringing her to the island a few years later. Over the years, two suffer through two miscarriages and a stillbirth. Then a boat washes ashore with a dead man and a newborn baby and the two must make a choice with far-reaching repercussions.

*Donated by the S.A.M. (Saturday A.M.) Book Club

 
Little Brother
Written by Doctorow, Cory   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:30

Marcus, seventeen, uses his computer hacking skills and gaming knowledge to thwart the Department of Homeland Security after being detained and interrogated for days after a terrorist attack. Young Adult.

 
Looking Backward
Written by Bellamy, Edward   
Friday, 31 December 2010 07:16

A sufferer of chronic insomnia, Bostonian Julian West enlists the help of a hypnotist to help him get some rest. However, West awakes to find that he is no longer in the Boston of 1887, but that of the year 2000. Bellamy’s novel became the second American novel to sell over a million copies.

 
Love in the Time of Cholera
Written by Garcia Marquez, Gabriel   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:35

Inspired by the courtship of Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s own parents, Love in the Time of Cholera follows Florentino Ariza and Fermina Daza from the moment Florentino first declares his love for Fermina, through her marriage to another man, until the day, fifty years later, that Florentino can declare his love for Fermina again.

 
Loving Frank
Written by Horan, Nancy   
Tuesday, 19 February 2013 15:35

In 1903, Edwin Cheney and Mamah Borthwick Cheney commissioned architect Frank Lloyd Wright to design their home. A few years later, Mamah and Frank, now lovers, leave their spouses and children to travel abroad together, creating a scandal that would end in tragedy.

* Donated by the Presbyterian Women's Book Club


 
Major Pettigrew's Last Stand
Written by Simonson, Helen   
Wednesday, 19 October 2011 14:50
This comedy of manners takes place in a small village in the English countryside. On the day that Major Ernest Pettigrew learns of his brother’s death, an unexpected visit from Mrs. Jasmina Ali, the village’s Pakistani shopkeeper, sparks a friendship that threatens the village’s sense of decorum and tradition.
 
Maltese Falcon
Written by Hammett, Dashiell   
Wednesday, 31 October 2012 10:39
A treasure worth killing for, a tough private eye with his own code of ethics, and a beautiful but treacherous woman whose loyalties shift at the drop of a dime add up to a haunting gem of detective fiction.
 
Maytrees
Written by Dillard, Annie   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:30

Often compared to Henry David Thoreau for her writing on the natural world, Annie Dillard's novel, The Maytrees, traces decades of love and longing on the tip of Cape Cod.

 
Memory Keeper’s Daughter
Written by Edwards, Kim   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:31

This fictional account of two very different families details the consequences of a father’s secret decision to give up one of his newborn twins, a daughter—named Phoebe—who is born with Down Syndrome. Despite her father’s fears, Phoebe, raised by the sympathetic and supportive Caroline, grows into a healthy young woman; meanwhile Phoebe’s twin brother, Paul, grows up under the care of the twins’ biological parents.

 
My Antonia
Written by Cather, Willa   
Saturday, 28 July 2012 13:28
Comprised of five books covering a twenty-year span in the life of narrator Jim Burden, My Ántonia begins with Jim as a young boy traveling to Nebraska to live with his grandparents on their homestead. There he meets Ántonia, the daughter of Bohemian immigrants and forms a friendship Jim will remember all of his life. *2012 Big Read Missoula Title!
 
My Sister’s Keeper
Written by Picoult, Jodi   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:58

Anna was conceived as a genetic match for her older sister in order to help in her sister’s fight against leukemia. After years of blood transfusions and surgeries, Anna decides to stand up for her own interests, taking action that could tear her family apart.

 
Night Circus
Written by Morgenstern, Erin   
Monday, 16 July 2012 12:07
In this enchanting debut novel, Morgenstern transports the reader into the 19th century world of Le Cirque de Rêves, a circus that is only open at night, and where the lines between illusion and reality disappear. Visitors do not know that the circus is actaully the stage for a duel between two magicians.
 
No Country for Old Men
Written by McCarthy, Cormac   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:50

In this modern day Western, Llewelyn Moss discovers several dead men, heroin and over $2 million in cash while on a hunting trip. Moss decides to take the money and soon he’s in danger and on the run.

 
No! I Don’t Want to Join a Book Club
Written by Ironside, Virginia   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:42

Nearing her sixtieth year, Marie Sharp decides to begin a diary. She is perfectly content remembering the excitement of her youth and doesn’t need exotic vacations or book clubs to pass the time. However, a new grandchild and the reawakening of an old romance may mean the excitement is far from over.

 
O Pioneers!
Written by Cather, Willa   
Thursday, 16 June 2011 13:08

When Swedish immigrant Alexandra Bergson’s father dies, she inherits their Nebraska homestead and must change the land from wild prairie to working farm as she comes of age. Cather’s classic first novel is a story of a new people on a new land.

 
On Beauty
Written by Smith, Zadie   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:16

In a modern variation on E.M. Forster’s Howard’s End, Smith investigates questions of politics and culture in her book, On Beauty. Liberal Rembrandt scholar Howard Belsey’s oldest son falls in love with the daughter of an extreme right-wing family and the two families are forced to reconsider what they really believe as they wage a political and personal war.

 
On Chesil Beach
Written by McEwan, Ian   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:51

McEwan’s 11th novel begins in 1962 on the wedding night of Florence, a musician, and her new husband Edward. As both fight to suppress their fears about the wedding night in an age of innocence prior to the sexual revolution, a misunderstanding leads to disastrous consequences.

 
Orchardist
Written by Coplin, Amanda   
Monday, 18 March 2013 12:30

Set in Washington state at the turn of the twentieth century, Coplin's debut novel follows orchardist William Talmadge. When two young pregnant girls show up in his orchard after stealing fruit at the market, Talmadge's reclusive peace is shattered. He must find a way to both help the girls and come to terms with his own past.


 
Orphan Master's Son
Written by Johnson, Adam   
Tuesday, 19 February 2013 16:14

Pak Jun Do is raised in a North Korean orphan work camp, trained as a tunnel soldier, and later becomes a professional kidnapper. Then Jun Do must take on the most dangerous mission of all by successfully impersonating Commander Ga, rival to Kim Jong Il, in order to save Sun Moon, Jun Do's love and Commander Ga's wife.

*Donated by Zula BCG

 
Other Boleyn Girl
Written by Gregory, Philippa   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:38

Mary Boleyn is sent to the court of Henry VIII at the age of fourteen help her ambitious family. Mary is successful and attracts the attention of the king. When the king’s favor begins to be bestowed on her sister Anne, Mary must choose whether or not to step aside.

 
Paris Wife
Written by McLain, Paula   
Sunday, 16 December 2012 13:54

McLain's novel brings Ernest Hemingway's first wife Hadley Richardson out of the shadows and into the light, creaing an alternate view of their courtship, marriage, and life in 1920s Paris among such literary giants as Gerturde Stein, Ezra Pound, and F. Scott Fitzgerald.

 
Passage to India
Written by Forster, E.M.   
Friday, 29 July 2011 14:42

Forster’s acclaimed 1924 novel explores the complexities of British colonialism in India. New to India, Miss Adela and Mrs. Moore set out to explore some caves with an Indian physician – Dr. Aziz. An ambiguous event in the caves sets off a legal battle turning British against Indian and calling the meaning of allegiance and friendship into question.

 
Pearl of China
Written by Min, Anchee   
Monday, 18 March 2013 12:06

This novel about Pearl S. Buck, the first American woman writer to win the Nobel Prize, is narrated through the eyes of a Chinese childhood friend. Buck grew up in a missionary family in China, achieved international acclaim for her writings on China, and would eventually be exiled from the country she loved.

* Donated by the Good Times Book Club

 
People of the Book
Written by Brooks, Geraldine   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:26

As rare-book expert Hanna Heath works on the conservation of the Sarajevo Haggadah, a fifteenth-century Hebrew manuscript, she discovers tiny artifacts within the manuscript’s binding that unlock a thrilling history of the book’s mysterious past. Inspired by a true story.

 
Power of the Dog
Written by Savage, Thomas   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:14

Set in 1920s Horse Prairie, MT, a boy is initiated into the secrets of ranch life and finds the link between tragedy and desire.

 
Pride and Prejudice
Written by Austen, Jane   
Friday, 31 December 2010 07:15

In this perennial classic, the spirited Elizabeth Bennett is one of five unmarried sisters. When a wealthy gentleman moves to the neighborhood and brings his even wealthier friend, Mr. Darcy, with him, a series of misconceptions drive a wedge between the Bennett sisters and their chance a marital bliss until Mr. Darcy can check is pride and Elizabeth can see past her prejudice.

 
Red Rover
Written by McNamer, Deirdre   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:51

This novel by Missoula author McNamer is a fictionalized account based on the true story of her uncle’s mysterious death after World War II. The novel follows the lives of three Montana men through glimpses of their childhood and lives during and after World War II. When one of the men is shot, the circumstances of his death will haunt the other two until late in life when the incident is brought to light again.

 
Reliable Wife
Written by Goolrick, Robert   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:37

When Catherine Land responds to a 1907 Chicago newspaper advertisement for “a reliable wife,” her intent is to kill the husband and become a wealthy widow. Ralph Truitt realizes he has been conned the moment Land walks through the door, but he marries her anyway, setting off a spiral of events that take Catherine and Ralph down a path neither expected.

 
Run
Written by Patchett, Ann   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:58

Since their mother's death, Tip and Teddy Doyle have been raised by their loving and ambitious father. A former mayor of Boston, Bernard Doyle wants to see his sons in politics, a dream the boys have never shared. But when an argument in a blinding New England snowstorm inadvertently causes an accident that involves a stranger and her child, all Bernard cares about is his ability to keep all of his children safe.

 
Sarah’s Key
Written by de Rosnay, Tatiana   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:28

Shortly before her family is arrested by the French police in Paris in 1942, ten year-old Sarah locks her brother in a cupboard. Sixty years later, a journalist attempts to discover what happened to Sarah and her family.

 
Saturday
Written by McEwan, Ian   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:51

Neurosurgeon Henry Perowne is an ordinary man, content with his life and loving family. His Saturday begins with plans of squash games and family dinners, plans that are put aside when a confrontation at a post-9/11 anti-war protest changes his life forever.

 
Saving Fish from Drowning
Written by Tan, Amy   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:18

When eleven Americans travel to Burma on an art expedition, they do not expect that a Christmas morning tour will leave them trapped in the jungle. Tan’s book is based on the real-life disappearance of American tourists in Myanmar.

 
Shadow Catcher
Written by Wiggins, Marianne   
Wednesday, 31 October 2012 10:26

In this unique novel, a fictionalized Marianne Wiggins is researching fictionalized early 20th century photographer Edward Sheriff Curtis, when she learns that her father (whom she believed dead for 30 years) has been admitted to a Las Vegas hospital. Research and life become intertwined as Wiggins attempts to sort out the past of both Curtis and her father.

 
Shadow of the Wind
Written by Ruiz Zafon, Carlos   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:10

In post-WWII Barcelona, a boy finds solace in a book called The Shadow of the Wind. He begins to search for the author’s other books and discovers that someone is destroying every single copy. This begins a journey to find out what happened to this mysterious author, uncovering a tale of murder, madness, and doomed love.

 
Sisters Brothers
Written by deWitt, Patrick   
Monday, 18 March 2013 12:38

When Charlie and Eli Sisters are hired to kill a prospector named Herman Kermit Warm, the brothers embark on a journey filled with misadventure as they travel from Oregon to California. A darkly humerous novel of the frontier West.

 
Something Wicked this Way Comes
Written by Bradbury, Ray   
Friday, 31 December 2010 07:17

A circus rolls into Green Town, Illinois on a cold October evening and two boys discover that Halloween has come early this year. What price would you pay if someone could make your greatest wish come true?

 
Sound and the Fury
Written by Faulkner, William   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:33

Faulkner’s 1929 novel of the south contains the three separate narratives of Compson brothers, Benjy, Quentin, and Jason, following the  family’s steady decline and their obsession with their beautiful sister Caddy.

 
Stargirl
Written by Spinelli, Jerry   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:17

When Stargirl Caraway comes to Mica High Leo’s life is turned around. Leo falls in love with Stargirl’s unconventional behavior, as does everyone else, at first. Of course this all changes and Leo is forced to decide whether his friendship with Stargirl is more important than his need to fit into the group. Young Adult.

 
State of Wonder
Written by Patchett, Ann   
Sunday, 20 May 2012 12:29
Marina Singh is a researcher for a pharmaceutical company in Minnesota. When a colleague is sent to the Amazon to connect with stubborn field scientist Annick Swenson and is reported dead, Marina must retrace his journey to find out what happened. Confronted by heat, the dangers of the jungle, and her complicated past with Swenson, Marina is forced to reevaluate her convictions regarding science, technology, and self.
 
Still Alice
Written by Genova, Lisa   
Thursday, 16 June 2011 12:25

First-time author and neuroscientist Genova mines her years of professional experience in this fictional account of 50-year old Alice Howland’s sudden descent into early onset Alzheimer’s disease. The happily married, mother of three struggles to remain independent as she slowly loses touch with her sense of self in this realistic portrait.

 
Suite Française
Written by Nemirovsky, Irene   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:57

Intended as a a set of five novels describing life under Nazi occupation in France, Suite Française consists of the two novels Jewish author Nemirovsky was able to write before being deported to Auschwitz. The novels remained hidden for sixty-four years before being rediscovered and published.

 
Sun Also Rises
Written by Hemingway, Ernest   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:39

Published in 1926, The Sun Also Rises follows a group of American and English expatriates, members of the Lost Generation in the post-World War I era, on a journey from Paris to Pamplona for the July fiesta and bullfight.

 
Surrounded
Written by McNickle, D'Arcy   
Wednesday, 31 October 2012 10:47

Archilde is the son of a Spanish father and Indian mother. Educated at a federal Indian boarding school, he is torn between two cultures. When he returns to his father's ranch on the Flathead Indian Reservation in Montana, he faces the destructive forces and hopelessness of reservation life contrasted with the white man's law.

 
Tenth Circle
Written by Picoult, Jodi   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:59

Pretty, popular, and in love, high school freshman Trixie Stone has everything going for her until an act of violence turns her life upside down, changing her perceptions of herself and her father, whom she idolized, forever.

 
The Art of Fielding
Written by Harbach, Chad   
Thursday, 14 June 2012 16:14
Harbach's warmhearted fiction debut follows Westish College baseball star Henry Skrinshander. When a routine throw goes off course, the fates of five people hang in the balance. Each must confront his or her demons, forge new friendships, and discover a new path.
 
Their Eyes Were Watching God
Written by Hurston, Zora Neale   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:42

Published in 1937 and written over a time span of only seven weeks, Their Eyes Were Watching God follows Janie Mae Crawford over the course of three marriages in Florida as she searches for true love. Hurston's novel investigates black culture and celebrates Janie Mae’s ability to find her own voice as a black woman.

 
Thousand Splendid Suns
Written by Hosseini, Khaled   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:41

At 15, Mariam is forced to marry the brutal, 40-year-old Rasheed. When Rasheed later takes on a second wife the lives of the two women become intertwined as they struggle to survive Afghani life under Taliban rule. From the author of the bestselling novel, The Kite Runner.

 
Tiger's Wife
Written by Obecht, Tea   
Saturday, 31 December 2011 16:36
At the close of war in the Balkans, Doctor Natalia is working in an orphanage on the "other side" when she learns that her grandfather, also a doctor, has died. Natalia looks back on the mythical stories her grandfather told of his past, trying to unlock the mysteries that ran between them. Orange Prize winner and finalist for the National Book Award.
 
To Kill a Mockingbird
Written by Lee, Harper   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:48

A perennial favorite with readers young and old, Harper Lee’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel follows Scout and Jem Finch along with their friend Dill as they learn about the issues of race, justice, cruelty and courage in a small Alabama town in the 1930s.

 
Uglies
Written by Westerfeld, Scott   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:20

Tally Youngblood lives in a futuristic society that makes all its residents “pretty.” But Tally can’t get the operation unless she betrays her friend who escaped to the rustic country to live off the grid. In her pursuit, Tally discovers a dirty secret about the pretty operation, and those who perform it. Young Adult.

 
Unaccustomed Earth
Written by Lahiri, Jhumpa   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:46

Unaccustomed Earth is a collection of eight short stories that investigate the relationships between expatriate Bengalis living in the United States and their more “Americanized” children. The stories explore the concept of identity and the meaning of family and culture.

 
Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry
Written by Joyce, Rachel   
Monday, 18 March 2013 12:58

When recently retired Harold Fry receives a letter from a former colleague who is dying, he finds himself embarking on a spontaneous journey from his small town (and nagging wife) to the hospice where Queenie Hennessy is staying. Fry sets out to walk over 600 miles, determined to keep Queenie alive as long as he is walking.

 
Water for Elephants
Written by Gruen, Sara   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:39

At ninety, or perhaps ninety-three, Jacob Jankowski drifts in and out of memories of the circus where he served as a veterinarian, fell in love with a married woman and bonded with an elephant named Rosie.

 
Weird Sisters
Written by Brown, Eleanor   
Thursday, 14 February 2013 16:36
Three sisters, Rosalind, Bianca, and Cordelia, return home to their rural Ohio college town and renowned Shakespeare scholar father when their mother undergoes treatment for cancer. The sisters are surpised to find that the others have returned home as well and each must look to their familial past in order to face the future.
 
White Teeth
Written by Smith, Zadie   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:17

Set in London, this novel follows three generations of the families of two World War II veterans, Archie Jones and Samad Iqbal. White Teeth touches on issues of friendship, class, family, ethnicity, identity and questions the difference between choice and fate.

 
Winter Garden
Written by Hannah, Kristin   
Sunday, 22 April 2012 15:29
Two sisters are forced to reunite with their distant mother when their father falls ill. Their father’s last request is to hear a tale told one last time in entirety. The story will uncover the truth of their mother’s past and change the sisters’ understanding of themselves and their family.
 
Anne Frank: Diary of a Young Girl
Written by Frank, Anne   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:34

The classic story of Anne Frank recounts the thoughts, fears, and dreams of a teenage Jewish girl during World War II, while she hides from the Nazis in an attic with her family. The diary is both deeply personal and profoundly universal.

 
Blink: The Power of Thinking without Thinking
Written by Gladwell, Malcolm   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:36

Gladwell, a New Yorker staff writer, provides an entertaining look at the process of “thin-slicing,” or the way in which we make split second decisions.

 
Born to Run
Written by McDougall, Christopher   
Saturday, 27 August 2011 14:09
Struck by the fact that runners seem to suffer from constant injury, McDougall sets off on an adventure to discover if we are truly “born to run.” Along the way McDougall encounters a cast of unusual characters, climaxing in a race that pits modern marathon athletes against the Tarahumara Indians, a tribe of superhuman athletes in Mexico’s Copper Canyons.
 
Cleopatra: A Life
Written by Schiff, Stacy   
Sunday, 22 April 2012 14:48
Pulitzer Prize-winner author Schiff’s page-turning biography reinterprets the life of the Egyptian queen. Wealth, power, murder, sex, intelligence and intrigue fill this vivid account of an incredible life.
 
Devil in the White City
Written by Larson, Erik   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:46

Larson’s account of the Chicago World’s Fair of 1893 focuses on the fair’s ambitious architect, Daniel H. Burnham, and Henry H. Holmes, the serial killer who used the fair ensnare his many victims.

 
Dreams from My Father
Written by Obama, Barack   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:57

Son of a black Kenyan father and a white American mother, Obama chronicles his travels from New York to Kansas to Hawaii and finally to Kenya on a journey to discover his roots and understand what it means to be a black American.

 
Eat, Pray, Love
Written by Gilbert, Elizabeth   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:35

In the aftermath of a painful divorce, Gilbert sets out on a year of travel, spending four months in three countries with the goal of exploring pleasure and devotion, while discovering herself along the way.

 
Fire and Brimstone
Written by Punke, Michael   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:00

On June 8, 1917, a fire broke out in a North Butte Mining Company shaft in Butte, Montana. It would become the worst hard-rock mining disaster in American history.

 
Garlic and Sapphires: The Secret Life of a Critic in Disguise
Written by Reichl, Ruth   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:04

“Every restaurant is a theater,” writes Gourmet editor in chief Ruth Reichl in a memoir chronicling her experience as restaurant critic for The New York Times. As restaurants began rolling out the red carpet whenever she walked in the door, Reichl took to donning disguises and assuming new personalities in order to accurately capture a restaurant’s experience – an experience quite different from that of the critics.

 
Geography of Bliss
Written by Weiner, Eric   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:19

Follow National Public Radio correspondent Eric Weiner on a journey around the world to discover not only what makes people happy, but where people proclaim to be the happiest. Will Weiner, a self-proclaimed grump, find the “key” to happiness?

 
Glass Castle
Written by Walls, Jeannette   
Monday, 28 February 2011 20:13

As an adult, Walls hid her past from everyone she knew for over two decades. In this memoir, she recalls growing up in a nonconformist family that traveled like nomads in the Southwest, moved to a rotting shack in rural West Virginia, and continually forced the four Walls children to be completely self-sufficient.

 
Guns, Germs, and Steel
Written by Diamond, Jared   
Saturday, 31 December 2011 16:52
Societies around the globe began as hunter-gatherers. What led to the rise of agriculture and technology, and why would certain societies become the colonizers as opposed to the colonized? A fascinating look at human history. Winner of the Pulitzer Prize.
 
Hunger of Memory: The Education of Richard Rodriguez
Written by Rodriguez, Richard   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:05

In this memoir, Rodriguez discusses his coming of age as a Mexican-American and the experience of being a “minority student,” from the day he entered school knowing only 50 words of English, through the completion of his M.A. at Columbia University.

 
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings
Written by Angelous, Maya   
Friday, 31 December 2010 07:11

The first of Angelou’s six-volume memoirs, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings chronicles Maya’s childhood from a terrible experience that left her mute for five years through her coming of age, work as the first black female street car conductor in San Francisco, struggle for civil rights and up to the birth of her son.

 
Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks
Written by Skloot, Rebecca   
Friday, 15 April 2011 15:39

Henrietta Lacks was a poor Southerner who died of cancer and was buried in an unmarked grave, yet a sample of her cells would become a cornerstone of scientific research. Skloot’s decade-long investigation into the origin of the “HeLa” cells uncovers the dark history of experimentation on African Americans, the birth of bioethics, and the legal battles over whether we control the stuff we are made of.

 
In the Garden of Beasts
Written by Larson, Erik   
Thursday, 04 April 2013 09:53

When President Roosevely selected William E. Dodd as German Ambassador in 1933, the University of Chicago history professor imagined a quiet post where he could complete a four-volume history of the South. Larson's fast-paced account of the experience of an American family - especially Dodd's flirtatious and socially active 24-year-old daughter - in Berlin as the Nazi party gains power reveals the initial naivete and then growing conflict as Hitler's true goals become evident.

* Donated in memory of Pattie Ireland Tornabene from the Big Sky Book Club

 
Infidel
Written by Hirsi Ali, Ayaan   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:40

Hirsi Ali’s memoir describes her childhood and coming of age in a strict Muslim family in Somalia, Saudi Arabia and Kenya. She survives civil war, female mutilation, and an arranged marriage before escaping to the Netherlands, where she earns a degree in political science. Her outspoken work on a reform of Islam has put her life in danger and brought her into the spotlight of today’s political arena.

 
Innocents Abroad
Written by Twain, Mark   
Wednesday, 31 October 2012 10:27

This account of Twain's cruise through Europe and the Holy Land with a group of religious pilgrims in 1867 was the best selling work of Twain's lifetime. Presented as a travel book, the work is actaully a comedic account filled with critiques and observations of his shipmates and the people they met in their travels.

 
Life on the Mississippi
Written by Twain, Mark   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:18

Filled with humor, folktales, and keen observations, Mark Twain’s early non-fiction account of the steamboat era on the Mississippi would later become an inspiration for his novel Huckleberry Finn.

 
Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier
Written by Beah, Ishmael   
Friday, 31 December 2010 07:15

At the age of 12, civil war in Sierra Leone separates hip-hop loving Beah from his family and forces him into the government army, where he becomes addicted to drugs and capable of murder. Eventually Beah is brought to a UNICEF rehabilitation center, but the war catches up with him there and he flees to the United States.

 
Man Who Loved China
Written by Winchester, Simon   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:20

When Joseph Needham, Cambridge scientist and freethinking intellectual, fell in love with a Chinese student, he began a lifelong love affair with both the girl and her country. Journeying to the farthest reaches of China during WWII, he unlocked the mysteries of how this empire discovered printing, explosives, suspension bridges, and even toilet paper before the rest of the world.

 
Me Talk Pretty One Day
Written by Sedaris, David   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:14

Dubbed “Garrison Keillor’s evil twin” in a Publisher’s Weekly review, Sedaris brings together a collection of hilarious and sometimes poignant essays about his unconventional and unusual family, experience as a performance artist, move to Paris, attempts to learn the French language, and much more.

 
Mockingbird: A Portrait of Harper Lee
Written by Shields, Charles J.   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:16

Journalist Charles J. Shields drew upon over 600 interviews plus correspondence and the personal papers of Truman Capote to write this inside look at the life of Harper Lee. This is the first biography ever written about the elusive author of To Kill a Mockingbird.

 
Moonwalking with Einstein
Written by Foer, Josua   
Sunday, 16 December 2012 14:01

Where are my keys? Have you seen my glasses? Do we have bad memories, or are we just out of practice? Join Foer for a playful investigation into the science of memory and how one can learn to use memory more effectively.

 
My Life in France
Written by Child, Julia   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:27

In 1948 Julia Child set sail for France with her diplomat husband, embarking on a life long love affair with food that turned her into one of the most famous names in the cooking world. Lively, humorous, and filled with delectable descriptions of food.

 
My Life on the Run
Written by Yasso, Bart   
Monday, 25 March 2013 13:26
In this part memoir, part travelogue, the “Mayor of Running” Bart Yasso depicts his journey as a young man who struggled with addiction and his rise to become Runner’s World magazine’s most well-known ambassador for the sport. Having run over 1,000 races all over the world, Yasso describes his strangest, most defeating, and most triumphant races thus far, all the while telling everyone he meets: “Never limit where running can take you.”
 
Names: A Memoir
Written by Momaday, N. Scott   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:52

This memoir details the author’s experience growing up as an Indian in both Indian and non-Indian communities. Writing in a style that draws heavily on traditional Indian stories and story-telling techniques for effect, Momaday explores what it means to identify himself as a part of an Indian community in today’s world.

 
Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals
Written by Pollan, Michael   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:59

In this bestseller, Michael Pollan poses the question: What should we have for dinner? The result is an investigation of industrial and organic food chains in the United States and an exploration of the impact of our food choices.

 
Out of Egypt
Written by Aciman, Andre   
Tuesday, 03 January 2012 18:29
Aciman has written a touching and affectionate portrait detailing the lives of his flamboyant Jewish family, from its bold arrival in Alexandria to its defeated exodus three generations later. In elegant and witty prose, Aciman introduces us to the marvelous eccentrics who shaped his life--his uncle, two grandmothers, and an aunt.
 
Persepolis
Written by Satrapi, Marjane   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:11

This graphic novel is Satrapi’s memoir about growing up during the Islamic Revolution. The novel follows Satrapi from age 10 to age 14, documenting everyday life in Tehran and her family’s personal struggles.

 
Reading Lolita in Tehran
Written by Nafisi, Azar   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:56

When rules at the University of Tehran became too restrictive, English professor Azar Nafisi decides to hold secret classes on Western literature for seven women in her home.

 
Reluctant Mr. Darwin
Written by Quammen, David   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:03

In a witty, journalistic style, Quammen chronicles twenty-one years of Darwin’s life, from the day Darwin returned from his Beagle voyage to the day he unleashed his theory of evolution upon the world. The authorinvestigates why it took Darwin twenty-one years to publish his theory.

 
Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down
Written by Fadiman, Anne   
Saturday, 08 October 2011 13:56
While Lia Lee’s Hmong parents and American doctors both had her best interests at heart, cultural differences ultimately left this epileptic child permanently brain damaged. Fadiman explores Hmong history, immigration, assimilation, and cultural miscommunication. National Book Critics Circle Award for Nonfiction winner.
 
Strength in What Remains
Written by Kidder, Tracy   
Monday, 28 February 2011 20:13

A beautifully written true story by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Tracy Kidder that follows the incredible journey of a medical student who escapes civil war in Burundi to arrive in New York with no English or contacts, but goes on to graduate from Columbia University and devote his life to healing.

 
Team of Rivals
Written by Goodwin, Doris Kearns   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:37

In this book, Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Goodwin investigates Abraham Lincoln and the leading members of his cabinet, providing fresh insights into the famed president’s personality and politics.

 
Tender Bar
Written by Moehringer, J.R.   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:52

"Long before it legally served me, the bar saved me.” In this memoir chronicling his coming of age and path to self discovery, Moehringer recounts his search for a father figure, his experiences with heartache and disillusionment, and the bar that was his refuge through it all.

 
The Big Short
Written by Lewis, Michael   
Thursday, 11 August 2011 15:55
The author of The Blind Side and Moneyball provides an illuminating, entertaining, and accessible account of what went on behind the scenes leading up to the stock market crash of 2008. Using personal accounts of the fiasco, Lewis uncovers the greed and short-sightedness of Wall Street along with the unlikely heroes who predicted the fall.
 
This House of Sky
Written by Doig, Ivan   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:30

Ivan Doig’s memoir about growing up in rural Montana was a finalist for the National Book Award and was chosen as the 2006 One Book Montana selection by the Montana Center for the Book and the Montana Humanities Council.

 
Three Cups of Tea
Written by Moretenson, Greg and David Oliver Relin   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:54

Greg Mortenson, former mountain-climbing bum, founds an organization to build schools in Central Asia after being nursed back to health by Pakistani villagers.

 
Three Cups of Tea Young Readers Edition
Written by Mortenson, Greg   
Wednesday, 31 October 2012 10:57

While mountain climbing in 1993, Mortenson became lost and ill, finding refuge in a tiny Pakistani village. In thanks to those who helped him, he founded the Central Asia Institute, which has now built schools for children all over the region.

 
Transition Handbook
Written by Hopkins, Rob   
Wednesday, 07 December 2011 18:45
How can one counteract the threats of peak oil and climate change? What would it mean to be a town in “transition”?  Hopkins presents a DIY guide to citizen action, empowering readers to reenergize their communities using sustainable means, and have some fun along the way.
 
Truck: A Love Story
Written by Perry, Michael   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:58

Perry, author and volunteer firefighter in the small town of New Auburn, WI, began the year with two goals: growing his own food and fixing up his 1951 International Harvester pickup truck. Along the way, he experiences mishaps and missteps, observes the humor in every day small town life, and ends up falling in love.

 
Turn Right at Machu Picchu
Written by Adams, Mark   
Monday, 18 March 2013 11:47

As a writer for National Geographic Adventure (albeit one who had never slept in a tent), Mark Adams set out to retrace the steps of Hiram Bingham III, the explorer who "discovered" Machu Picchu one hundred years ago and is villified today. Will Adams be able to determine if Bingham was a hero or a villan? Will he learn what Machu Picchu really was? A sure bet if you like the travel writings of Bill Bryson and Tony Horwitz.

*Donated by the West of WYE Book Club.

 
Voyage Long and Strange
Written by Tony Horwitz   
Wednesday, 22 December 2010 15:29

When Tony Horwitz (Confederates in the Attic) realizes he has no idea what happened between Columbus’s 1492 voyage and the founding of Jamestown in 1607, he sets off on an adventure to retrace sites of first contact. An interesting mix of history and travelogue.

 
Where Men Win Glory: The Odyssey of Pat Tillman
Written by Krakauer, Jon   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:45

The author of Into the Wild and Into Thin Air investigates the tragic story of Pat Tillman, the NFL star who turned down a multimillion-dollar contract to join the army after 9/11.  Tillman was killed by friendly fire in 2004 and made into a poster child of heroism as part of a government cover-up that Krakauer brings to light in this page-turner.

 
Worst Hard Time
Written by Egan, Timothy   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:32

John Steinbeck’s classic novel The Grapes of Wrath chronicles the American flight from the great dust bowl of the 1930s, but what happened to the people who stayed behind? Egan traveled the Dust Bowl region, collecting oral histories to discover why people chose to stay and what happened to those that did.

 
Year of Magical Thinking
Written by Didion, Joan   
Friday, 31 December 2010 09:29

In this memoir, Didion reflects on her 40 year marriage and describes on how she survived the year after her husband of died of a heart attack while their daughter was in a coma.

 
Zookeeper’s Wife
Written by Ackerman, Diane   
Friday, 31 December 2010 07:07

In The Zookeeper’s Wife, best-selling author Diane Ackerman uncovers the remarkable true story of Polish zookeepers Jan and Antonina Zabinski, who hid hundreds of Jews and Polish resisters in their Warsaw zoo during World War II.

 
Book Chat Bag Reservations
Written by Molly Ledermann   
Friday, 31 December 2010 10:23

What is a Book Chat Bag?

A Book Chat Bag is a canvas bag filled with at least 10 copies of one title and a discussion guide with book reviews, author information, discussion questions and additional tips and resources for book groups.

How do I reserve a Book Chat Bag?

Choose a title from our list of available Book Chat Bags. Stop in at the MPL Reference Desk, call (406)721-2665, or send an email to This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it to reserve your title. We will need your name, phone number, desired title, pick up date, return date, and number of copies. Book Chat Bags must be picked up and returned directly to the Reference Desk and can only be checked out to one person in the group. Not a member of MPL? Contact us to have a Book Chat Bag sent to your home library.

Can I renew a Book Chat Bag?

Our Book Chat Bags are often booked months in advance and so we are not always able to extend your time on a Book Chat Bag reservation, but we are happy to accommodate your group whenever possible. Contact the Reference Desk at (406)721-2665 or This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it to inquire about Book Chat Bag renewals.


How can my book discussion group help?

Your can share your reading interests with other local book groups and help the library build its Book Chat Bag collection by donating paperback copies of books your book group has read.  Please mention that your donation is for the Book Chat Bag collection when you drop the books off at the library.

Book Chat Bags are sponsored by the Friends of the Library and the Tamarack Library Federation.