fbpx

Search Results for: VIPREG2024 1xbet new promo code Laos

The Answer Is Never

by Jocko Weyland

…as a kid–what it’s like to awaken to a sense of possibility, and to realize that what you’ve grown up with is not what you’re stuck with.” –The New Yorker…

Topsy

by Michael Daly

“Michael Daly vividly revives a rollicking pachydermal tale that riveted New Yorkers a century ago.” —New York Times…

Crawling at Night

by Nani Power

“[Power’s] starkly realistic characters and terse, lyrical prose herald her as an exciting new voice. . . . Ito is a Japanese sushi chef, recently arrived in New York City,…

Violencia!

by Bruce Jay Friedman

“[Friedman’s] writing is so funny – and deceptively effortless – critics often liken it to a stand-up comedy routine.”–The New York Times…

Two-Step Devil

by Jamie Quatro

…yet.”—Lauren Groff From a New York Times Notable “writer of great originality” comes a bold new novel about love, faith and two societal outsiders whose lives converge in the contemporary…

Father’s Day Reads: The Technologist

Hackers, programmers, engineers, and futurist dads can geek out with these five techno-savvy titles, whose insights range from techno-thriller to hacker history to genre-defying new fictional forms. Exploding the Phone…

Published in 1964, and again today: Jean Genet’s The Thief’s Journal, with a new intro by Patti Smith

…Jean-Paul Sartre’s legendary original foreword, and a brand-new introduction by Genet’s great admirer Patti Smith. Genet’s is not a cookie-cutter story of literary success. Born in 1910 to a young…

Small Worlds

by Caleb Azumah Nelson

An exhilarating and expansive new novel about fathers and sons, faith and friendship from National Book Foundation 5 Under 35 honoree and Costa First Novel Award winning author Caleb Azumah…

Freeman’s: Change

by John Freeman

Featuring thrilling new work from Lauren Groff, Ocean Vuong, Rickey Laurentiis, and more, the latest installment of the acclaimed literary journal Freeman’s explores the hope and pain of the ever-changing…

Walk the Blue Fields

by Claire Keegan

…And to imagine critics, far in the future, deploying lofty new terms to explain what it is that makes Keegan’s fiction work.” —Maud Newton, The New York Times Book Review…