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Show New arrivals at the P.C. Library Here are some of the newest arrivals at the Park City Library: Seeds of Yesterday, by V.C. Andrews. In the conclusion con-clusion of the Dollanger saga, Cathy, Chris and their children are again threatened threaten-ed by the insidiously evil spirit of Malcolm Foxworth. When a Darkness Falls, by Paul Zindel. This adult novel of terror is a masterwork of psychological suspense. Here is the unforgettable story of three desperate people who are brought together in a vivid and frightening journey into the dark side of the American dream. Friends of the Opposite Sex, by Sara Davidson. In her rich and rewarding novel, Sara Davidson explores ex-plores what many people are looking for in the '80s, with a story about a woman and a man searching for commitment, commit-ment, for love, friendship, family and for a connection to something that lasts. The Color of Light, by William Goldman. A young writer obsessed by the past finds himself involved in an odyssey of violence, tragedy and a search for a murderer. Heretics of Dune, by Frank Herbert. Several millenia after the death of Leto II and the catastrophe of the Scattering, both the secretive Bene Thleilax and the wise women of Bene Gesserit prepare to seize power over the returning remnants. This is the fifth Dune novel in this series. (Compiled by Oresta Es-quibel). Es-quibel). Sex and Uestiny, Dy Germaine Greer. The author of the "Female Eunuch" examines parent-child relationships rela-tionships in the West, Middle East, India and Africa and explores the possibility that Western culture hates its children and takes little pleasure from family life. In Banks We Trust, by Penny Lernoux. In this powerful indictment of the banking community and its less than reputable associations, associa-tions, the author unfolds a far-ranging story of corruption corrup-tion at the highest levels of the banking establishment from the Vatican to the best known of American banks. The Hearts of Men, by Barbara Ehrenreich. The author contends that it was not women but men who first rebelled against their sex roles and . brought about what conservatives see as the breakdown of the family. She argues that the male flight from commitment began a full 10 years before the feminist revival of the '60s. |