

Angeline Boulley, “Fire Keeper’s Daughter” (Henry Holt & Co.) Anthony Doerr, “Cloud Cuckoo Land: A Novel” (Simon & Schuster) ġ0. Louise Erdrich, “The Sentence: A Novel” (HarperCollins Publishers)ĩ. Susan DeFreitas, “Dispatches from Anarres: Tales in Tribute to Ursula K. Nick Offerman, “Where the Deer and the Antelope Play: The Pastoral Observations of One Ignorant American Who Loves to Walk Outside” (Penguin Random House)ħ. Volunteers from a German non-profit risk the waves of the Mediterranean to pluck refugees from sinking rafts pushing off from Libya in the middle of the night. Louise Erdrich, “The Night Watchman: A Novel” (HarperCollins Publishers)Ħ. Meg Waite Clayton, “The Postmistress of Paris: A Novel” (HarperCollins Publishers)ĥ. Stead, “Amos McGee Misses the Bus” (Oblong Books)Ĥ. Viola Shipman, “The Secret of Snow” (Graydon House) ģ. Mitch Albom, “The Stranger in the Lifeboat: A Novel” (HarperCollins Publishers)Ģ. Merlin Sheldrake, “Entangled Life: How Fungi Make Our Worlds, Change Our Minds & Shape Our Futures” (Random House)ġ0. If you dont have any shipping providers enabled your customers will not be restricted to choose between Local Delivery & Pickup, if these have been enabled. Mardi Link, “Wicked Takes the Witness Stand: A Tale of Murder and Deceit in Northern Michigan” (University of Michigan Press)ĩ. By default, Lifeboat creates a few shipping providers to get your store started. Robert Knapp, “Gangsters Up North: Mobsters, Mafia, and Racketeers in Michigan’s Vacationlands” (Cliophile Press)Ĩ. Jerry Dennis, “Up North in Michigan: A Portrait of Place in Four Seasons” (University of Michigan Press) ħ. Abra Berens, “Grist-A Practical Guide to Cooking Grains, Beans, Seeds, and Legumes: 140+ Recipes and 160+ Variations” (Chronicle Books)Ħ. Mary Siisip Geniusz and Wendy Makoons Geniusz, “Plants Have So Much To Give Us, All We Have To Do Is Ask: Anishinaabe Botanical Teachings” (University of Minnesota Press)ĥ. George Stone, “1000 Perfect Weekends: Great Getaways Around the Globe” (National Geographic)Ĥ. Dave Grohl, “The Storyteller: Tales of Life and Music” (Dey Street Books/HarperCollins Publishers)ģ. Major Jon Turnbull and Samantha Turnbull, “Zero Percent Chance-A Tribute to the Heroes of Cross-Functional Team Manbij: A Soldier’s Memoir” (WestBow Press/Thomas Nelson & Zondervan)Ģ.

Mary Siisip Geniusz and Wendy Makoons Geniusz, “Plants Have So Much To Give Us, All We Have To Do Is Ask: Anishinaabe Botanical Teachings” (University of Minnesota Press) NONFICTIONġ. Nick Offerman, “Where the Deer and the Antelope Play: The Pastoral Observations of One Ignorant American Who Loves to Walk Outside” (Penguin Random House)ġ0. They will use it to build and launch new, customer insight-led services that will tear away at the money-making parts of banks.9. Often born online, brimming with fresh talent and with systems that were built last year and not last century, these competitors will be able to make the data sweat. Thanks to Open Banking, new competitors will pose a greater threat. No big bank is doing much with big data, meaning that the entire banking establishment has been able to rest easy. Their data is creaking, complex, and largely unusable due to universally unwieldy technology. We found a mix of hungry challenger banks and new competitors, eyeing up a complacent banking establishment.īanks, for now, are protected. Working with Callcredit, the consumer data company, we conducted in-depth research into how the sector is approaching the regulation.

With customer permission, competitors will be able to access banks’ enormous – practically unused – data repositories. This may sound like a dry compliance point, but the reality is far from it. It will force banks to open up their Advanced Programming Interface (API). Open Banking, which comes into place January 2018, is a landmark development for the banking industry.
