Incoming Resources
- Celt and pepper, Ralph McInerny
- Portuguese irregular verbs, Alexander McCall Smith ; illustrations by Iain McIntosh
- Green thumb, Ralph McInerny
- Irish gilt, Ralph McInerny
- The rooster bar, a novel, John Grisham
- The savage garden, Mark Mills
- Portuguese irregular verbs, Alexander McCall Smith ; illustrations by Iain McIntosh.
- The Netanyahus, an account of a minor and ultimately even negligible episode in the history of a very famous family, Joshua Cohen
- Emerald Aisle, a Notre Dame mystery, Ralph McInerny
- A bond with death, Bill Crider
- All played out, a Rusk University novel, Cora Carmack
- Irish tenure, a mystery set at the University of Notre Dame, Ralph McInerny
- Darkside, P.T. Deutermann
- The letter killeth, Ralph McInerny
- After we collided, Anna Todd
- The book of kills, a mystery set at the University of Notre Dame, Ralph McInerny
- English as a second language, Megan Crane
- Wild, Sophie Jordan
- At the villa of reduced circumstances, Alexander McCall Smith
- The green revolution, Ralph McInerny
- Chickpea lover (not a cookbook), D.L. Nelson
- Mudwoman, Joyce Carol Oates
- A knife in the back, Bill Crider
- Unusual uses for olive oil, Alexander McCall Smith
- The finer points of sausage dogs, Alexander McCall Smith
- When we met, A. L. Jackson, Molly McAdams, Tiffany King, Christina Lee
- Big boned, a Heather Wells mystery, Meg Cabot
- Penelope, Rebecca Harrington
- The drowning tree, Carol Goodman
- At the villa of reduced circumstances, Alexander McCall Smith ; illustrations by Iain McIntosh
- The probability of murder, Ada Madison
- Irish alibi, Ralph McInerny
- All broke down, a Rusk University novel, by Cora Carmack
- The finer points of sausage dogs, Alexander McCall Smith ; illustrations by Iain McIntosh
- My latest grievance, by Elinor Lipman
- Walking disaster, a novel, Jamie McGuire
- Irish coffee, Ralph McInerny
- Unusual uses for olive oil, a Professor Dr. von Igelfeld entertainment novel, by Alexander McCall Smith ; illustrations by Iain McIntosh
- The savage garden, Mark Mills