fbpx

Search Results for: VIPREG2024 1xbet free promo code india Singapore

Howard Sounes

…subjects—the Wests, Bukowski and Dylan. Diversity in the subject matter is intentional. I want to be free to write about a wide variety of subjects and, by switching around, I…

Beverly Hall Lawrence

…Georgia State University. She has worked as a journalist for the Atlanta Journal & Constitution, the Detroit Free Press, the Washington Post, and Newsday. She lives in New York City….

Brian Antoni

…a year old, his parents moved from Trinidad to Freeport, Bahamas—buying into the vision of a multi-millionaire ex-convict who dreamed of building a society free of taxes. Brian remembers seeing…

Fallen Order

by Karen Liebreich

“A sordid tale of pederast priests and blind-eye bishops: a headline fit for today, that is 350-odd years old. . . . Liebrich’s account shows not only that priestly abuse…

Flags on the Bayou

by James Lee Burke

From New York Times-bestselling author James Lee Burke comes a novel set in Civil War-era Louisiana as the South transforms and a brilliant cast of characters – enslaved and free

António Lobo Antunes

…to suggest that nothing much has changed in the last 400 years, the caravels are surrounded by Iraquian oil boats, while slave markets rub shoulders with duty free shops. Antunes…

Peter Nathaniel Malae

Peter Nathaniel Malae is the author of What We Are and the story collection Teach the Free Man, which was a finalist for the NYPL Young Lions Fiction Award and…

Solitary

by Albert Woodfox

The extraordinary saga of a man who, despite spending four decades in solitary confinement for a crime of which he was innocent, inspired fellow prisoners, and now all of us,…

Splitting

by Fay Weldon

“Adarkly comic portrait of one woman’s shattering response to divorce: the latest from an author rightly celebrated for writing witty cautionary tales about the contemporary sexual jungle.” –Kirkus Reviews…

Rushes

by John Rechy

“A major American novelist writing at the peak of his powers.” –Richard Hall, The San Francisco Chronicle Book Review…