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The Yoga Teacher

by Alexandra Gray

“Funny and incisive . . . smart, stylish, and one of a kind.” —Candace Bushnell…

Grove at Home: March 14-20

…— and before Pinter had been recognized with the Nobel Prize in Literature — with the eighth episode of the show’s ninth season, “The Betrayal.” Like the groundbreaking Pinter play…

Grove at Home: January 24-30

…Committed, Viet Thanh Nguyen’s intensely-anticipated sequel to his Pulitzer Prize-winning debut novel The Sympathizer. As we try to manage our impatience, we’re enjoying this video of a talk Viet gave…

10 Scandalous Facts About the 1958 Novel Candy

…comedy brilliance” (Novak). What do we mean? Read on—in 2018 the following ten facts may not shock you, but we bet they’ll get you reading. 1.) Candy was illegally distributed…

Querelle

by Jean Genet

…and traitor. . . . Genet takes seriously the threat latent in sexuality, and drags us with him to a confrontation with the basest of angels.” –Michael Levenson, Harper’s Magazine…

Seven Against Georgia

by Eduardo Mendicutti

“Mendicutti’s. . . engagingly outrageous series of linked stories features seven flamboyant drag queens. . . . [These] impudent narrators are flashy, sexy, and oodles of fun. . . ….

Yonder Stands Your Orphan

by Barry Hannah

“A literary event . . . A new voice of the South whose characters roamed as far as Asia and who were citizens of modern anxiety. . . . A…

Waiting for the Dark, Waiting for the Light

by Ivan Klíma

A powerful, important novel about the struggle between the ideal and the temptations of freedom.

Triptych and Iphigenia

by Edna O'Brien

“To the illustrious list of names: Yeats, Joyce, Behan, O’Casey, Beckett, add O’Brien. . . . [She] uses words the way a juggler employs shiny balls, tossing them up, letting…

The Toughest Indian in the World

by Sherman Alexie

“Alexie reveals himself to be a more fearless writer than one might ever have imagined; the stories are bold, uncensored, raucous, and sexy.” –Ken Foster, San Francisco Chronicle Book Review…