Here is a rundown of this week’s newest book releases.
Self-Improvement
More Time For You (Rosemary Tator, Alesia Latson)
Rosemary Tator and Alesia Latson have been in the business of teaching their clients how to handle their stress to become effective leaders. In More Time For You, they will share their secrets and teach you how to handle stress so you become one, too. The book shows how to make better and faster decisions according topriorities and how to handle distractions and interruptions, among others.
History
King Philip’s War: Colonial Expansion, Native Resistance and the End of Indian Sovereignty (Daniel R. Mandell)
Daniel Mandell explores the colonial expansion of Indian sovereignty for decades and how it affected their society. He also reveals the shifting relationships of and between the Natives and colonists. King Philip’s War is a great account about the war that greatly affected Native-Anglo relations and the United States of America.
Fiction
Motion To Suppress (Perri O’Shaughnessy)
Nina Reilly, a lawyer from San Francisco, has just left her husband and her old job and relocated to a simpler life in Lake Tahoe. To start her new life, she decides to help out a friend, Misty Patterson, divorce her abusive husband. But when the husband turns up murdered, Nina’s case quickly changes to a murder case. And there are big, blank spots in Misty’s memory, making it harder for Nina to defend her. Will they be able to bring back Misty’s memory and find the identity of the real killer before it’s too late?
Business
Traders, Guns and Money (Satyajit Das)
A finance expert, Satyajit Das shows us, in Traders, Guns and Money, an exposé on the culture, games and deceptions played out every day in trading rooms with other people’s money. From an insider’s view, the book gives us a lowdown on the business of trading and marketing derivatives.
Nonfiction
Portraits and Persons (Cynthia Freeland)
Cynthia Freeland, a leading philosopher of art, discusses and answers fascinating and fundamental questions on art and the art form in Portraits and Persons. A widely published Professor of Philosophy at the University of Houston, Freeland answers through philosophy how the art form is made.
Don’t forget to check these books out on your next book shopping trip!



