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Quiet Days in Clichy
by Henry MillerHenry Miller’s celebration of love, art, and the Bohemian life at a time when the world was simpler and slower….
Pirandello’s Henry IV
by Luigi Pirandello‘stoppard in his new pared-down, updated, and racily colloquial adaptation, finds both the intellectual rigor and the dramatic momentum and presents us with a quirky hybrid that is eventually and…
The Perfect Summer
by Juliet Nicolson“Sharp and rangy. . . . Nicolson sets a lively, theatrical pace and makes good use of recurring characters. . . . [There are] many glittering pieces in Nicolson’s book.”…
Peace Like a River
by Leif EngerA “reminder of why we read fiction to begin with” (San Francisco Chronicle), Peace Like a River is Leif Enger’s extraordinary debut novel—a heroic quest, a tragedy, a love story,…
Once Is Not Enough
by Jacqueline Susann“[Susann’s] pulp poetry resonates to this day. With her formula of sex, drugs and show business, Susann didn’t so much capture the tenor of her times as she did predict…
On The Wealth of Nations
by P. J. O'Rourke“O’Rourke is a wonderful stylist . . . well worth reading.” —Allan Sloan, New York Times Book Review…
Nocturnal Butterflies of the Russian Empire
by José Manuel Prieto“Precise, gorgeous, and assured.” –Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal…
My Friend the Mercenary
by James Brabazon“Intensely vivid story of war and the peculiar breed of warriors who fight in 21st-century Africa. . . A haunting memoir and tribute to an extraordinary comrade-at-arms.” —Kirkus Reviews…
Moloch
by Henry Miller“A work of extraordinary political consciousness, predicated upon the longing savagely to corrode, or better yet, explode the foundations of a world of wage slavery and commercial empires. . ….
The Merciful Women
by Federico Andahazi“[The Merciful Women]’s playful, satiric, erotic, sometimes savage, sometimes slapstick account of one man’s case of severe literary envy is something completely different, and well worth reading.” –San Francisco Chronicle…