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Tulsa

by Larry Clark

…challenge. For this is a collection of photographs that assail, lacerate, devastate. And ultimately indict. These are pictures that shimmer with a ferocious honesty.” –Dick Cheverton, The Detroit Free Press…

The Soft Machine

by William S. Burroughs

“Burroughs voice is hard, derisive, inventive, free, funny, serious, poetic, indelibly American, a voice in which one hears transistor radios and old movies and all the clichés and all the…

Meditations in an Emergency

by Frank O'Hara

“Moving in the way that only simple communication can be moving… His poems always manage a fresh start free from the dreadful posturings of the conventional verse of his generation.”—Kenneth…

Licorice

by Abby Frucht

‘spellbinding as a dream. . . . Ms. Frucht’s free-floating imagination and gentle, sensual voice have fashioned an enchanting novel.” –Bethami Probst, The New York Times Book Review…

Hell

by Robert Olen Butler

The Pulitzer Prize winner delivers a deliciously witty new novel of good, evil, and free will, set in a Hell populated by figures from history and contemporary culture (William Randolph…

Escape Velocity

by Mark Dery

“A lively compendium of dispatches from the far reaches of today’s computer savvy avant-garde . . . this book is your ideal guide to the cultural complexities of the computer…

Eat the Rich

by P. J. O'Rourke

“O’Rourke has done the unthinkable: He’s made money funny.” –Forbes FYI…

The Eye Like a Strange Balloon

by Mary Jo Bang

“The language in Mary Jo Bang’s poems can seem to break free from its subjects, rising into its own realm; if Bang understands that aerial appeal, she also knows how…

Bullwhip Days

by James Mellon

…a group portrait of people not long dead, all brutally deprived of their freedom, some insidiously deprived of the very idea that they should be free.” –The New York Times…

Blueprints of the Afterlife

by Ryan Boudinot

…compelling novel of future shock, overconsumption, social control, and human nature by Ryan Boudinot, whom Dave Eggers has called “Some kind of new and dangerous cross between Vonnegut and Barthelme.”…