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Newly Published, From Cults to Con Men

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THE OXFORD BROTHERHOOD, by Guillermo Martínez, learn by P.J. Ochlan. (Blackstone Publishing.) On this brainy thriller, an Oxford grad pupil in arithmetic finds himself embroiled within the shadowy historical past of Lewis Carroll.

LOVE THAT STORY: Observations From a Gorgeously Queer Life, by Jonathan Van Ness, learn by the writer. (HarperAudio.) The comic, hairstylist and “Queer Eye” star follows up his 2019 memoir, “Over the High,” with a group of essays about gender id, mourning his cat, a historical past of his hometown of Quincy, Unwell., and extra.

FINDING TAMIKA, by Erika Alexander, Kevin Hart, Charlamagne Tha God, Ben Arnon, Rebkah Howard, David Individual and James T. Inexperienced, learn by Erika Alexander. (Audible Originals.) This audiobook unique for mature audiences tells the disturbing however necessary true-crime story of 24-year-old Tamika Huston, who went lacking from her Spartanburg, S.C., residence in 2004.

BRAZEN: My Unorthodox Journey From Lengthy Sleeves to Lingerie, by Julia Haart, learn by the writer. (Random Home Audio.) The star of “My Unorthodox Life,” and former chief government of a modeling and expertise company, recounts her uncommon path from housewife in an extremist spiritual sect to trend insider.

LIARMOUTH: A Really feel-Dangerous Romance, by John Waters. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $26.) The acclaimed filmmaker recognized for his boundary-pushing comedies has written a twisted and sleazy caper following a con artist on the run and crammed with genitalia, violence and loads of satire.

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ONE DAY I SHALL ASTONISH THE WORLD, by Nina Stibbe. (Little, Brown, $27.) On this tender and comical novel, a middle-aged girl navigates the modifications in her life as her husband begins in search of immortality and her lifelong finest buddy is propelled to skilled glory.

THE HATED CAGE: An American Tragedy in Britain’s Most Terrifying Jail, by Nicholas Guyatt. (Primary, $32.) A historian on the College of Cambridge attracts on archival materials to inform the story of the 1000’s of American prisoners of conflict held at Dartmoor Jail, the primary racially segregated jail in U.S. historical past, in the course of the Conflict of 1812.

LET’S NOT DO THAT AGAIN, by Grant Ginder. (Holt, $27.99.) Ginder’s satirical fifth novel follows a dysfunctional household as Nancy Harrison, a widowed New York politician working for the U.S. Senate, finds her marketing campaign in jeopardy when her daughter is caught throwing a champagne bottle by means of a Parisian bistro’s window at a nationalist rally.

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