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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…
The Grilling Encyclopedia
by A. Cort Sinnes“The Grilling Encyclopedia is full of great tips on everything from how much charcoal to use to coordinating the rest of the menu.” –San Francisco Chronicle…
Boats
by David Seybold“Write your name all over the endpapers first. This anthology is a definite keeper.” –San Diego Tribune…
The Subterraneans
by Jack Kerouac“Each book by Kerouac is unique, a telepathic discord. Such rich, natural writing is nonpareil in the later twentieth century.” —Allen Ginsberg…
Vedanta
by Hans Torwesten“Torwesten makes lucid the long history of Vedantic Hinduism, but he also maintains a genuine Vedantic poise: open, scrupulous, serene but engaged.” –David Elliott, San Diego Union…
The French Revolution
by George Rude…likely soon to surpass George Rudé’s judicious synthesis. . . . One of the most balanced overviews of the French Revolution available in English.” –Daniel L. Wick, San Francisco Chronicle…
If They Move . . . Kill ‘Em!
by David Weddle“Written in no-nonsense prose as lean as the laconic-cowpoke director himself, this fat bio reconstructs the trailblazing architect of The Wild Bunch.” –William O. Goggin, San Francisco Weekly…
Recital of the Dog
by David Rabe…much both to Albert Camus and James M. Cain. . . . Rabe’s beautiful, tight, fluent prose renders the fragility of reality with enormous power and grace.” –San Francisco Chronicle…
Running in Place
by Nicholas Delbanco“Delbanco writes beautifully. . . . It’s hard to imagine a better eye than Delbanco’s through which to see another part of the world.” –Jody E. Carpenter, San Francisco Chronicle…