Search Results for: VIPREG betwinner today promo code San Marino
Mammals
by Pierre Merot“A highly amusing book… Merot is a master of mockery.” –San Diego Union Tribune…
Lord of the Barnyard
by Tristan Egolf…an arctic blast of fresh air and a far cry from the formulaic writing so prevelant in much contemporary fiction . . . [a] memorable, ambitious debut.” –San Francisco Chronicle…
The Hunter and Other Stories
by Dashiell Hammett“These stories are among Hammett’s best. . . . [His] prose is always savvy and sturdy, but for the man who invented ‘hard-boiled,’ it can also be surprisingly elegant.” —San…
Goodbye Tsugumi
by Banana Yoshimoto…perfectly round stone dropped into a still pool. . . . In Tsugumi the author has created one of her most palpable and intriguing characters.” –Jennie Yabroff, San Francisco Chronicle…
A Girl Could Stand Up
by Leslie Marshall…. . . A Girl Could Stand Up is the kind of novel that one immediately takes to heart, a remarkable story–goofy and bittersweet.” –June Sawyers, 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…
The Beat Hotel
by Barry Miles“An entertaining narrative about important writers now considered American literary heroes.” –Publishers Weekly…
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…
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…