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Story of My Life

by Jay McInerney

“[McInerney’s] talent for capturing the nuances and idiosyncrasies of our culture is even more powerfully evident in The Story of My Life . . . Underneath Alison’s hip, partygirl exterior…

Halsey’s Typhoon

by Bob Drury

“Absorbing . . . A vivid tale of tragedy and gallantry at sea.” —Publishers Weekly…

The Butterfly Mosque

by G. Willow Wilson

The extraordinary story of an all-American girl’s conversion to Islam and her ensuing romance with a young Egyptian man, The Butterfly Mosque is a stunning articulation of a Westerner embracing…

Published in 1964, and again today: Jean Genet’s The Thief’s Journal, with a new intro by Patti Smith

Graffito of Jean Genet, Paris. Today, we’re exhilarated to be republishing Jean Genet’s The Thief’s Journal, the iconic book that launched its author into the firmament of avant-stardom, complete with…

Reading in Honor of World Refugee Day

…to acknowledge our existence as such and to advocate for the new refugees today. The following titles, which span novels, short fiction, and the literary anthology Freeman’s, center on refugee…

Perlmann’s Silence

by Pascal Mercier

A stunning novel from the internationally best-selling author of Night Train to Lisbon, Perlmann’s Silence is an accomplished portrayal of a man whose grief and crippling self-doubt have paralyzed him,…

Eight Days at Yalta

by Diana Preston

Meticulously researched and vividly written, published on the 75th anniversary of the historic Yalta conference, Eight Days at Yalta is the definitive new history of the meeting that reordered the…

By the Grand Canal

by William Riviere

An exquisite novel redolent of Venice and the haze of World War I by the author of the award-winning Kate Caterina…

Brecht & Co.

by John Fuegi

“This biography is fascinating in its diversity of detail and portraiture of a period.” –The Economist…

Moscow Exile

by John Lawton

From “quite possibly the best historical novelist we have” (Philadelphia Inquirer), the fourth Joe Wilderness spy thriller, moving from Red Scare-era Washington, D.C. to a KGB prison near Moscow’s Kremlin…