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    	<title>Top 100 records that match your search results </title>
    	<description> Displaying the top 100 results that match your query.</description>
    	<link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/rssapi.jsp?browse=true&amp;Ne=7236&amp;N=3+7240+7517+7266</link>
  		 
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            <title>A visit from the Goon Squad
            by Egan, Jennifer.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=1302341</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>Bennie Salazar, an aging former punk rocker and record executive, and Sasha, the passionate, troubled young woman he employs confront their pasts in this powerful story about how rebellion ages, influence corrupts, habits turn to addictions, lifelong friendships fluctuate and turn, and how art and music have the power to redeem.</description>
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            <title>Olive Kitteridge
            by Strout, Elizabeth.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=991271</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>At the edge of the continent, in the small town of Crosby, Maine, lives Olive Kitteridge, a retired schoolteacher who deplores the changes in her town and in the world at large but doesnt always recognize the changes in those around her.</description>
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            <title>The Brief wondrous life of Oscar Wao
            by Diaz, Junot, 1968-
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=725001</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>Living with an old-world mother and rebellious sister, an urban New Jersey misfit dreams of becoming the next J. R. R. Tolkien and believes that a long-standing family curse is thwarting his efforts to find love and happiness.</description>
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            <title>Middlesex
            by Eugenides, Jeffrey.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=417840</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>In the spring of 1974, Calliope Stephanides, a student at a girls school in Grosse Pointe, Michigan, finds herself drawn to a chain-smoking strawberry blond classmate with a gift for acting. The passion that furtively develops between them - along with Callies failure to develop - leads Callie to suspect that she is not like other girls. In fact, she is not really a girl at all. The explanation for this shocking state of affairs is a rare genetic mutation - and a guilty secret - that have followed Callies grandparents from the crumbling Ottoman Empire to Prohibition-era Detroit and beyond, outlasting the glory days of the Motor City, the race riots of 1967, and the familys second migration, into the foreign country known as suburbia. Thanks to the gene, Callie is part girl, part boy. And even though the genes epic travels have ended, her own odyssey has only begun.--BOOK JACKET.</description>
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            <title>Interpreter of maladies : stories
            by Lahiri, Jhumpa.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=291208</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>Traveling from India to New England and back again, the stories in this debut collection unerringly chart the emotional journeys of characters seeking love beyond the barriers of nations and generations. Imbued with the sensual details of Indian culture, they also speak with universal eloquence to everyone who has ever felt like a foreigner. Like the interpreter of the title story - Lahiri translates between the strict traditions of her ancestors and the baffling New World.--BOOK JACKET.</description>
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            <title>Independence day
            by Ford, Richard, 1944-
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=115278</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>Frank Bascombe is no longer a sportswriter, yet hes still living in Haddam, New Jersey, where he now sells real estate. Hes still divorced, though his ex-wife, to his dismay, has remarried and moved, along with their two children, to Connecticut. (He bought her old house and made it his home.) In the midst of his so-called Existence Period, Frank is happy enough in his peculiar way, more or less sheltered from fresh pain and searing regret. And he has high hopes for this 4th of July weekend (while the nation lurches toward another election, Bush vs. Dukakis, in uncertain prosperity). As a realtor hes seeking a house and a lifes accommodation for deeply hapless clients relocating from Vermont; in his free time he takes pride in managing his entrepreneurial, and civic, sidelines. Then he will travel to the Jersey Shore, where his girlfriend and delight awaits him. Finally, up the Northeast Corridor, to Connecticut, there to pick up his larcenous and emotionally troubled teenage son, and together they will visit as many sports halls of fame as they can in two days. But Franks Independence Day turns out not as hed planned. This decent, appealingly bewildered, profoundly observant man is wrenched, gradually and inevitably, out of his private refuge. And in this embattled ascent Richard Ford captures the mystery of life - in all its conflicted glory - with grand humor, intense compassion and transfixing power.--BOOK JACKET.</description>
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