Left Neglected by Lisa Genova.
"Sarah Nickerson, like any other working mom, is busy trying to have it all. One morning while racing to work and distracted by her cell phone, she looks away from the road for one second too long. In that blink of an eye, all the rapidly moving parts of her over-scheduled life come to a screeching halt. After a brain injury steals her awareness of everything on her left side, Sarah must retrain her mind to perceive the world as a whole. In so doing, she also learns how to pay attention to the people and parts of her life that matter most." Good novel about facing the world when you're not aware of your left side (due to right brain injury). You can't walk because you not aware of where your left leg is. You can't read because you can't see the left side of words. Powerful and moving.

In The Dark Of Dreams by Marjorie M. Liu.
OK romance about two lovers sharing dreams. Apparently Liu has written for the comics which might explain how much action happens in this book and how it takes a long time for our protagonists to actually communicate with each other.

The Dream-Hunter by Sherrilyn Kenyon.
"Dr. Megeara Kafieri watched her father ruin himself and his reputation as he searched to prove Atlantis was real. Her deathbed promise to him to salvage his reputation has now brought her to Greece where she intends to prove once and for all that the fabled island is right where her father said it was. But frustration and bad luck dog her every step. Especially the day they find a stranger floating in the sea. His is a face she's seen many times.... in her dreams.
What she doesn't know is that Arik holds more than the ancient secrets that can help her find the mythical isle of Atlantis. He has made a pact with the god Hades: In exchange for two weeks as a mortal man, he must return to Olympus with a human soul. Megeara's soul."
Part of Kenyon's "Dream Hunter" series and a serviceable read.

Be Still My Vampire Heart by Kerrilyn Sparks.
Romantic fluff and fun. The vampires are the good guys in this series. You might guess it's comedy when the first book in the series was titled "How To Marry A Millionaire Vampire". smile

Long Hot Summoning by Tanya Huff.
Laugh-out-loud book 3 of the "Keeper's Chronicles" where our heroes must stop an encroaching of Hell into our dimension... yes, Hell is in a shopping mall.

In Fury Born by David Weber. Space opera.

A Princess of Roumania by Paul Park.
"Many girls daydream that they are really a princess adopted by commoners. In the case of teenager Miranda Popescu, this is literally true. Because she is at the fulcrum of a deadly political battle between conjurers in an alternate world where "Roumania" is a leading European power, Miranda was hidden by her aunt in our world, where she was adopted and raised in a quiet Massachusetts college town."

Over The Wine-Dark Sea
The Gryphon's Skull
The Sacred Land
Owls To Athens
all by H.N. Turteltaub (pseudonym for Harry Turtledove)
Sostratos and Menedemos are cousins (Menedemos is the captain, Sostratos is the toikarkhos or business manager) on the "Aphrodite", an akatos (ship with twenty oarsmen) that plies the luxury trade in the Mediterranean about 310 BC, about 15 years after the death of Alexander the Great. Over the series, they travel from their home island of Rhodes to various destinations - Great Hellas (southern Italy), Sicily, various Greek islands, Phoenicia, and (obviously) Athens. Very enjoyable if you like to read "how things really were" in those days. Not so fun if you were actually living at that time - the Macedonian marshals were squabbling over Alexander's empire and common people get caught up in the affairs of the great.

Schism
The Final Key
by Catherine Asaro.
Very readable and fun books in her "Skolian Empire" series. However, there is a big vulnerability to the good guys' empire: If your huge galactic empire depends entirely on only two people (Rhon telepaths) that can keep the infrastructure going, you've got a big problem.

Ike's Bluff: President Eisenhower's Secret Battle To Save The World by Evan Thomas.
It's the 1950's, you're Dwight Eisenhower, you've just been elected president, and you have control over the nation's nuclear arsenal. Should you wage pre-emptive war on the Soviets? Should you bomb North Korea to end the Korean war? Should you support the troops at Dien Bien Phu in Vietnam and perhaps drag American into another Asian land war? Should you support the British and the French in the Suez crisis? Eisenhower navigated his way through the stormy shoals of statecraft and he never got full credit for it - he's a hugely underrated president.