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Wetlands

by Charlotte Roche

“With her jaunty dissection of the sex life and the private grooming habits of the novel’s eighteen-year-old narrator, Helen Memel, Charlotte Roche has turned the previously unspeakable into the national…

Cockpit

by Jerzy Kosinski

“A dazzling succession of . . . erotic episodes . . . Cockpit defines itself (as Kosinski does his hero) by the suicidal chances it takes . . . brilliantly…

Sing Them Home

by Stephanie Kallos

“Sing Them Home constantly surprises, changing voices, viewpoints, and tempos, mixing humor and pathos, and introducing a big cast of vividly portrayed characters, major and minor. Readers who admired Kallos’s…

The Journal Keeper

by Phyllis Theroux

“I loved this singularly honest and graceful book. The Journal Keeper reminds us that there is no such thing as an ordinary moment, and certainly no such thing as an…

Editors on Editing

by Gerald Gross

“A superb collection of essays–wise, original, and “educational” in the best sense of the word. Every publisher, editor, writer and agent should buy at least one copy and then a…

Drawing Conclusions

by Donna Leon

The landmark twentieth novel in the celebrated Commissario Guido Brunetti series.

Manson in His Own Words

by Nuel Emmons

“A glimpse of part of the American experience that is rarely described from the inside . . . It compels both interest and horror.” –The Washington Post…

The Beast God Forgot to Invent

by Jim Harrison

“[These novellas] prove again that Harrison is our greatest non-writerly writer.” —Newsweek…

The Twentieth Train

by Marion Schreiber

‘schreiber has told an inspiring story. [She has] portrayed the quiet but forceful and effective resistance, by ordinary Belgians, Jews and Christians alike, to four years of occupation by Nazi…

Grove at Home: January 17-23

…anniversary of the birth of August Strindberg, the legendary playwright, novelist, and theorist often considered the father of modern Swedish literature. In 1971, the Royal Shakespeare company staged a production…