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Bohemian Paris
by Dan Franck“[Bohemian Paris] will captivate both serious and casual readers. . . . Marvelous and informative.” –Carol J. Binkowski, Library Journal (starred review)…
“If you ask me what I want, I’ll tell you. I want everything.” ―Kathy Acker
…critics writing today. Figures considered include Susan Sontag, Nora Ephron, Dorothy Parker, and Janet Malcolm. A Best of the Year at NPR, the Progressive, the Minneapolis Star Tribune, and Refinery29….
Grove at Home: March 14-20
…vault — to say hi, remind you to keep reading, and let you know what’s on our minds. Friday, March 19 Celebrating Marceline Loridan-Ivens Today would be the ninety-third…
Grove at Home: July 12—18
…Today, in LitHub, Ford writes about the books she turned to, while she was writing, to make her own debut possible. As will surprise no one who’s had the pleasure…
Father’s Day Reads: The Technologist
…to his first novel, searching for a form that will express the world as it has become. Pop-up ads, search results, web chats, snippets of conversation, lines of code, and…
Win $1000 for reading and writing about one of the most exciting novels of the twenty-first century
Fourteen years in the writing, and 1664 pages in length, theMystery.doc is one of the most unusual novels ever published, combining photographs, pop-up ads, web chats, lines of code with…
True North
by Jim Harrison“Harrison consistently commands our attention for his humanity and his tenderness. That he can create such tension in the process—a tension not released until the last page—and in the end…
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…
Second Violin
by John Lawton“Smart and gracefully written . . . It has been Lawton’s achievement to capture, in first-rate popular fiction, the courage and drama—and the widespread tomorrow-we-may-die exuberance—of that terrible and thrilling…
12,000 Miles in the Nick of Time
by Mark Jacobson“Jacobson is a very funny writing. . . . He also weaves in enough memoir . . . to tie the current adventure to a larger question of what it…