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Bitter Fruit

by Achmat Dangor

“A haunting story of a family disintegrating, wonderfully authentic . . . its progress like slow dancing.” –Barbara Trapido, The Independent…

Exploding the Phone

by Phil Lapsley

A riveting history of the telephone hackers of the ’50s, ’60s, and ’70s….

Grove at Home: March 28-April 3

…https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vayksn4Y93A Thursday, April 1 It’s Gil Scott-Heron’s birthday! Today would have been the seventy-second birthday of Gil Scott-Heron — author, musician, and indelible master of his own distinctive brand of…

Grove at Home: March 14-20

…vault — to say hi, remind you to keep reading, and let you know what’s on our minds.   Friday, March 19 Celebrating Marceline Loridan-Ivens Today would be the ninety-third…

Grove at Home: July 12—18

Today, in LitHub, Ford writes about the books she turned to, while she was writing, to make her own debut possible. As will surprise no one who’s had the pleasure…

Father’s Day Reads: The Technologist

…to his first novel, searching for a form that will express the world as it has become. Pop-up ads, search results, web chats, snippets of conversation, lines of code, and…

Win $1000 for reading and writing about one of the most exciting novels of the twenty-first century

Fourteen years in the writing, and 1664 pages in length, theMystery.doc is one of the most unusual novels ever published, combining photographs, pop-up ads, web chats, lines of code with…

Thirteen Stories and Thirteen Epitaphs

by William T. Vollmann

“And certainly no one writing today of any generation has more news to relate than Vollmann, a rough-edged beast who has been slouching toward some millennial Bethlehem with a monstrous…

Palestine

by Karl Sabbagh

“Relating the story of Palestine through his own family, Karl Sabbagh (the son of a Palestinian father and an English mother) gives a poignant, often shocking account of how Palestine…

Jasmine

by Bharati Mukherjee

“A fable, a kind of impressionistic prose-poem, about being an exile, a refugee, a spiritual vagabond in the world today; Mukherjee has eloquently succeeded.” –The New York Times…