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The Mammoth Cheese
by Sheri Holman“Holman has fashioned a tale that is poignant and powerful and, like an award-winning cheese, surprisingly complex.” —Chris Bohjalian, The Washington Post Book World…
Light
by Margaret Elphinstone“Richly detailed . . . Elphinstone takes genuine pleasure in her imagined reality. . . . She bestows on all her characters strengths and flaws, creating a remarkably convincing reality….
World Made by Hand
by James Howard Kunstler…grim with portent, it is ultimately, as Camus’s novel The Plague, an impassioned and invigorating tale whose ultimate message is one of hope, not despair.” —Michael Leone, San Francisco Chronicle…
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…
The Visitors and Fred & Madge
by Joe Orton…Joe Orton is a cultural event of the first magnitude. . . . The time to redress the record has at last arrived.” –David Ehrenstein, San Francisco Chronicle Book Review…
Under Radar
by Michael Tolkin…. . .Tolkin harnesses the image-making faculty in a reader’s brain and puts it to work in the service of his own uniquely moral storytelling.” –David Kipen, The San Francisco…
Temples of Delight
by Barbara Trapido…Temples of Delight is a grown-up version of an adolescent fantasy. . . . It is quirky, wise and warm, full of charm and entirely original.” – San Francisco Chronicle…
Stet
by Diana Athill…So her engaging memoir, Stet: An Editor’s Life, is full of juicy stories about the egos and libidos behind the literary personages she has known.” –Andrea Behr, San Francisco Chronicle…