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The Breaking of Nations

by Robert Cooper

“Essentially an attempt to bridge the ideological divide between hard and soft power. Both, he suggests in this short, elegant collection of essays, are necessary in today’s messy world.” –The…

Octavio Paz

The Nobel Prize winning Octavio Paz was born in 1914, near Mexico City. His family was forced into exile, which they served in the United States, after the assassination of…

Ten Little Indians

by Sherman Alexie

“In [Alexie’s] warm, revealing, invitingly roundabout stories, the central figures come in all shapes and sizes, sharing only their wry perspective on Indian life off the reservation. . . ….

Yonder Stands Your Orphan

by Barry Hannah

“A literary event . . . A new voice of the South whose characters roamed as far as Asia and who were citizens of modern anxiety. . . . A…

Anderson’s Ché Guevara

by Jon Lee Anderson

“Excellent . . . admirably honest [and] staggeringly researched . . . It is unlikely that after Anderson’s exhaustive contribution, much more will be learned about Guevara.” —Los Angeles Times…

Light

by Margaret Elphinstone

…on all her characters strengths and flaws, creating a remarkably convincing reality. . . . Conveys the ache of loss while balancing it with hope.” –Irene Wanner, San Francisco Chronicle…

Between Us Girls

by Joe Orton

…to the best of E. F. Benson and Ronald Firbank. . . . The time to redress the record has at last arrived.” –David Ehrenstein, San Francisco Chronicle Book Review…

The Wonder House

by Justine Hardy

…of Arundhati Roy’s God of Small Things or even the cultural dalliances of E.M. Forster than to the clichéd forbidden loves of Bollywood.” —Elizabeth Kiem, San Francisco Chronicle Book Review…

Winkie

by Clifford Chase

“Winkie offers readers a sort of odd, outrageous delight. A verve and a nostalgia . . . that it is no crime to indulge.” —The San Francisco Chronicle…

We Own This Game

by Robert Andrew Powell

…providing context for the intense competition, Powell elevates We Own This Game well above the average sports book to a significant sociological study.” –Stephen J. Lyons, The San Francisco Chronicle…