Search Results for: Dial 24X7 = 1800-299-7264 United Airlines Tollfree Number
First Love and Other Shorts
by Samuel Beckett“The cracked and crackling narrator of First Love who tells of how he met a woman on a bench, went back to live with her, and left her as she…
Asian Godfathers
by Joe Studwell“A myth-shattering look at Southeast Asia’s powerful Chinese tycoons . . . A richly reported study of power and stunted economic development.” —BusinessWeek…
What It Is Like to Go to War, by Karl Marlantes
by Karl MarlantesFrom the author of the New York Times best seller Matterhorn, which has sold over 250,000 copies, What It Is Like to Go to War is a powerful nonfiction book…
Wrestling with Zion
by Tony Kushner“What is so very, very valuable about Wrestling With Zion is that it has given [the writers] a forum to say all of these things where they need not be…
Saddam Hussein
by Efraim Karsh“Karsh and Rautsi have set a standard for evidence and analytical rigor that other biographers will be hard-pressed to match… Not only do the full documentation and precise style reflect…
The Hidden War
by Artyom Borovik“[A] remarkable book . . . Borovik manages to convey an intimate sense of the war in Afghanistan with the novelist’s eye for the telling image. . . . Borovik…
Stripper Lessons
by John O'Brien“O’Brien handles [his] story with a masterly and subtle art, as her turns the unlikely into the possible without gush or affectation: Like Carroll himself, the change is slow, timid,…
Stargazing
by Peter Hill“It’s 1973, Watergate and Vietnam, the Grateful Dead. What are you going to be when you grow up? asks a friend. A lighthouse keeper, says our 20-year old. . ….
Misconception
by Ryan Boudinot“What starts out as a fairly standard story of teenagers taking themselves too seriously ends up being a funny and finely hewn examination of some serious concerns. There are the…
Landscape of the Body
by John Guare“Whenever [Guare’s] imagination takes over, whenever his astonishing dramatic talent for creating characters and lines and scenes is let loose, he is invaluable.” —The New Yorker…