The Natural Order of Things
“Reads like William Faulkner or Céline . . . bedeviled and lyrical.”—The Boston Globe “A work of poetic and erotic genius.”—Los Angeles Times From…
keep reading“Reads like William Faulkner or Céline . . . bedeviled and lyrical.”—The Boston Globe “A work of poetic and erotic genius.”—Los Angeles Times From…
keep reading“Beautifully crafted stories. . . . Wickedness, evil, malice is called by name; and for Hansen’s people the snake in the garden never fails…
keep readingA gleeful yet serious philosophical manifesto in aphorism by the creator of the hugely popular @NeinQuarterly Twitter feed, written in the same “crisp, allusive,…
keep readingFew institutions are as loved, as loathed, and as historically important as the United States Post Office, the subject of this landmark century-spanning social, political, and economic history.
keep reading“A lively portrait of his famous forebears, along with an account of the theater of the time and the surprisingly parallel worlds of prostitutes…
keep reading“I find both the substance and the rhetoric of many of the articles here inspiring. But even those who don’t might admire the imagination, forthrightness and clarity of most of the contributors.” –Ann Marlowe, Salon…
keep reading“Ecott excels at quixotic explorations of corners of the dive world. . . . It should be awarded a place on any diver’s reference…
keep reading“Packed with more fascinating, trivial, vital, and perverse non sequiturs than you can shake an encyclopedia at.” –The New York Times Book Review
keep reading“A compact style and a sharp eye for detail . . . help the reader digest a huge and complex subject. . . ….
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