fbpx

Search Results for: VIPREG2024 1xbet new promo code Macau

Once Is Not Enough

by Jacqueline Susann

“[Susann’s] pulp poetry resonates to this day. With her formula of sex, drugs and show business, Susann didn’t so much capture the tenor of her times as she did predict…

The House of Morgan

by Ron Chernow

…and ambition on Wall Street, the book has the movement and tension of an epic novel. It is, quite simply, a tour de force.” —The New York Times Book Review…

Four Blondes

by Candace Bushnell

“Bushnell has her milieu down cold, and writes with the peculiarly New York cynicism of a woman who has attended one too many fragrance launches.” –New York Times Book Review…

A Diamond in the Desert

by Jo Tatchell

…guide, this search for the mysteries behind one of the world’s richest cities is “the best book . . . on the Gulf coast boom town to date.” —Bloomberg News…

a “Working Life”

by Eileen Myles

From “one of the essential voices in American poetry” (New York Times) comes a rich new collection of expansive, light-footed, and cheerfully foreboding poems oddly in tune with our strange…

Wilmington’s Lie

by David Zucchino

From Pulitzer Prize-winner David Zucchino comes a searing account of the Wilmington riot and coup of 1898, an extraordinary event unknown to most Americans

Michael Wolfe

…for an hour and showing him a new poem, if I had one. Rather than major in the literature of my own language, I studied Greek and Latin, French and…

Michelle Dean

…editor at the New Republic, she has written for the New Yorker, Nation, New York Times Magazine, Slate, New York Magazine, Elle, Harper’s, and BuzzFeed. She lives in Los Angeles….

Wanting

by Richard Flanagan

…with exquisite precision. . . . An entirely unified meditation on desire, ‘the cost of its denial, the centrality and force of its power in human affairs.’” —The New Yorker…

Much Depends On Dinner

by Margaret Visser

“Fascinating . . . Margaret Visser is a gifted informal writer, and these chapters combine a wealth of unusual information with extreme readability. . . . In short, Visser whetted…