Search Results for: Deals 1 800-299-7264 Cheap Flights from San Francisco to Bangalore - United Airlines
I Love You More Than You Know
by Jonathan Ames“Ames delivers more droll, exhibitionistic essays about his romantic misadventures, his beloved great-aunt and (of course) his underwear. His hyperkinetic readings are never less than joyous.” –Time Out New York…
High Lonesome
by Barry Hannah“Barry Hannah writes the most consistently interesting sentences of any writer in America today. . . . High Lonesome collects thirteen stories, a handful of them of startling unexpectedness, with…
The Grove Centenary Editions of Samuel Beckett
by Samuel BeckettA four-volume set of Beckett’s canon, edited by Paul Auster and designed by Laura Lindgren….
The Great Hurricane: 1938
by Cherie Burns“Very good . . . sure to help keep the terrible storm in its proper place in New England’s memory, as well as being timely reading in this period of…
Gould’s Book of Fish
by Richard Flanagan“What’s memorable–even extraordinary–about this book are Flanagan’s aphoristic talent, his imagination and his uncanny ability to channel the Rabelaisian voices of the great picaresque writers–Fielding, Sterne, Smollet. . . ….
Gondola
by Donna LeonFrom the bestselling novelist, a beautifully illustrated collection of original pieces on Venice’s famed gondolas, with an accompanying CD of barcarole songs….
Gojiro
by Mark Jacobson“A comic masterpiece of tragic proportions . . . a visionary novel. Only one other writer has Mark Jacobson’s ability to spin a yarn at the speed of light: Pynchon.”…
Forty Thieves
by Thomas PerryA devilishly plotted chase-and-pursuit novel by “a master of nail-biting suspense” (Los Angeles Times), featuring a husband-and-wife detective team hired to look into the murder of a research scientist….
Falling in Love
by Donna Leon“The ever-incredible Leon’s twenty-fourth stunning entry in her stellar mysteries . . . brings the series full circle.” —Library Journal (starred review)…
Easy in the Islands
by Bob Shacochis“[Shacochis’s] stories have an unselfconscious narrative momentum–a linear drive toward an ending–that I associate with the easy ways of an old master . . . I think this boy’s been…