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Search Results for: American Airlines 1800-299-7264 New Booking Number

Tobacco

by Iain Gately

“Ambitious . . . informative and perceptive . . . Gately has done a great deal of research . . . and has assembled a lot of useful information in…

Convenience Store Woman Captivates the New Yorker, NPR’s Fresh Air, the New York Times, and more

…this “smart and sly novel” (Publishers Weekly) has the reading world talking this summer. As The New Yorker‘s Katy Waldman writes: “The novel borrows from Gothic romance, in its pairing…

The Hungry Gene

by Ellen Ruppel Shell

“Compelling. . . . Journalist Ellen Ruppel Shell takes us into the wide world of obesity, seeking answers to how we got here and how we can get back to…

Jacqueline Osherow

…for the Arts, and the Ingram Merrill Foundation, and has been awarded the Witter Bynner Prize by the American Academy of Arts and Letters. She has received a number of…

I Want to Show You More

by Jamie Quatro

…O’Connor . . . Quatro has a poet’s compound eye . . . [and] fearless lyricism. . . . Expansive, joyful, with forgiveness supplanting ruination.” —James Wood, The New Yorker…

A Free Man of Color

by John Guare

“[A Free Man of Color] . . . might be a masterpiece. . . . one of the three or four most stirring new plays I’ve seen.” —Terry Teachout, The…

The Bible

by Karen Armstrong

“Karen Armstrong preaches the gospel truth in The Bible, explaining how the spiritual guide for one out of three people on the planet came into being and evolved over the…

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…

Celebrating National Poetry Month

…a “Working Life” by Eileen Myles From “one of the essential voices in American poetry” (New York Times), a “Working Life” is a rich new collection of expansive, light-footed, and…

Shadow-Box

by Antonia Logue

“That three such wildly contrasting characters can coexist in the same novel is indicative of the era’s (and the author’s) bracing audacity. . . . Logue does an admirable job.”…