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Black Hawk Down
by Mark Bowden“Amazing . . . One of the most intense, visceral reading experiences imaginable. . . . The individual stories are woven together in such a compelling and expert fashion, the…
The Natural Order of Things
by António Lobo Antunes“The Natural Order of Things . . . reads like William Faulkner or Céline . . . gorgeous . . . bedeviled [and] lyrical . . . a remarkable writer.”…
It’s Not Love, It’s Just Paris
by Patricia Engel“Astonishing . . . A love story that just won’t quit.” —Edwidge Danticat…
Cities
by John ReaderDeclared “the most enjoyable book ever written about the matter of the city” (The Times, London), this is a magisterial exploration of these defining artifacts of civilization….
Salvage
by Tom Stoppard“A Dickensian portrait of the fractious émigré community.” —Michael Billington, Guardian (UK)…
The Giant of the French Revolution
by David LawdayThe Giant of the French Revolution tells the story of George-Jacques Danton—visionary leader and tragic hero—in a work The Economist called “a gripping story, beautifully told.”…
Liberty’s First Crisis
by Charles SlackThe tumultuous early years of the United States are brought to life in this gripping account of the Sedition Act and its victims, including a firebrand congressman, a famous muckraking…
Sing Them Home
by Stephanie Kallos“Sing Them Home constantly surprises, changing voices, viewpoints, and tempos, mixing humor and pathos, and introducing a big cast of vividly portrayed characters, major and minor. Readers who admired Kallos’s…
The Helmet of Horror
by Victor Pelevin“Sharp, funny and, what’s the word, numinous.” —Hugo Barnacle, Sunday Times (London)…
Tough, Tough Toys for Tough, Tough Boys
by Will Self“Self’s satires combine humanity with ingenuity, manifesting a Swiftian obsession with scale, a Kafkaesque fixation with blind alleys and the narrative legerdemain of Jorge Luis Borges.”–The Times Literary Supplement (London)…