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Fat Bald Jeff

by Leslie Stella

…imagined fun. . . . There are so many funny lines and scenes that even librarians may like it. As for the lumpen–they’ll love it.” –Michael Cart, San Francisco Chronicle…

The Ends of Our Tethers

by Alasdair Gray

…life–marriage and relationships as well as the isolation, loss, and the failures which come from these interactions–and steadily dissect them with a mischievous eye.” –Michael Standaert, The San Francisco Chronicle…

The Divine Husband

by Francisco Goldman

“The Divine Husband presents the peculiar crossroads where love and imagination meet politics and history. . . . A great miscegenating carnival of ambition and desire.” —Lee Siegel, The New…

Boats

by David Seybold

“Write your name all over the endpapers first. This anthology is a definite keeper.” –San Diego Tribune…

By the Shore

by Galaxy Craze

“Breathtaking. . . . Craze is note-perfect from beginning to end.” —San Francisco Chronicle…

Arkansas

by John Brandon

…. Arkansas rants against the machine in a voice combining Raymond Chandler’s side-of-the-mouth noir with Quentin Tarantino’s gleeful-psychopath wit and Mark Twain’s episodic romance of the journey.” —San Francisco Chronicle…

Allan Stein

by Matthew Stadler

…diluted modern sense of the word, but in its older combination of beauty and menace, fascination and dread . . . A novel of extraordinary imagination and beauty.“––San Francisco Chronicle…

The Boy Who Ran to the Woods

by Jim Harrison

“Harrison is a master at describing the natural world, and Pohrt’s illustrations are gently evocative of the northern Michigan landscape.” —San Francisco Sunday Examiner & Chronicle Book Review…

Portrait of an Eye

by Kathy Acker

…layers of reality… Acker is an expert at evoking this shadowy realm of belief and emotion where the rules of cause and effect do not necessarily apply.” –San Francisco Chronicle…

The Beat Hotel

by Barry Miles

“An entertaining narrative about important writers now considered American literary heroes.” –Publishers Weekly…