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A Good Man
by Guy Vanderhaeghe…of the origins of Canada’s tangled relationship with its big southern neighbor. . . . Vanderhaeghe has delivered an epic that matches its grand ambitions.” —Bob Armstrong, Winnipeg Free Press…
Eat the Rich
by P. J. O'Rourke“O’Rourke has done the unthinkable: He’s made money funny.” –Forbes FYI…
The Disappeared
by Kim Echlin“The familiar tale of star-crossed lovers is revisited with gripping immediacy and compelling freshness in Kim Echlin’s The Disappeared. Writing with sensuality, yearning, and in a voice readers will not…
Blueprints of the Afterlife
by Ryan BoudinotAn audacious, hilarious, and compelling novel of future shock, overconsumption, social control, and human nature by Ryan Boudinot, whom Dave Eggers has called “Some kind of new and dangerous cross…
The Eye Like a Strange Balloon
by Mary Jo Bang“The language in Mary Jo Bang’s poems can seem to break free from its subjects, rising into its own realm; if Bang understands that aerial appeal, she also knows how…
Bullwhip Days
by James Mellon…a group portrait of people not long dead, all brutally deprived of their freedom, some insidiously deprived of the very idea that they should be free.” –The New York Times…
Give War a Chance
by P. J. O'Rourke“Mocking on the surface but serious beneath, sharply attuned to quotidian hypocrisy and contradiction…this book contains some of O’Rourke’s best work to date. When it comes to scouting the world…
Holy City
by Henry Wise…Cosby No one innocent. No one free. Nothing sacred. Holy City is the captivating debut from Henry Wise about a deputy sheriff who must work alongside an unpredictable private detective…
Tulsa
by Larry Clark…challenge. For this is a collection of photographs that assail, lacerate, devastate. And ultimately indict. These are pictures that shimmer with a ferocious honesty.” –Dick Cheverton, The Detroit Free Press…
The Tremor of Forgery
by Patricia Highsmith“Highsmith has produced work as serious in its implications and as subtle in its approach as anything being done in the novel today.” —Julian Symons…