fbpx

Search Results for: Frontier New Flight Booking 800-299-7264 Toll Free Contact Number

Jay McInerney

…in New York Magazine, Vanity Fair, the New Yorker, the New York Times Book Review, Guardian, the Times Literary Supplement and the New York Review of Books. He writes a…

James Gardner

…a City. His writings have appeared in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the New Republic, and the British Spectator. He was the art critic at the New

Father of the Rain

by Lily King

Award-winning author Lily King’s new novel spans three decades in a riveting psychological portrait of a wildly charismatic patriarch as seen through the eyes of his daughter….

The Industrial Revolutionaries

by Gavin Weightman

…characters across continents and centuries, forging a genuinely global history that brings the collaborative, if competitive, business of industrial innovation to life.” —Stephen Mihm, The New York Times Book Review…

Thomas Paine’s Rights of Man

by Christopher Hitchens

…far published in the series, and Christopher Hitchens makes it with characteristic verve and style. An engaging account of Paine’s life and times [that is] well worth reading” —New Statesman…

Goodbye, Goodness

by Sam Brumbaugh

“Goodbye, Goodness is the rock “n” roll Great Gatsby. The American dream, slaughtered during the indie-rock nineties by an author who lived it. . . . Brumbaugh’s a new voice–witty,…

Annabel

by Kathleen Winter

Award-winning Canadian author Kathleen Winter’s Annabel is a stunning debut novel about the family of a mixed-gendered child born into a rural hunting community in the 1960s….

Europe: A Natural History

by Tim Flannery

From internationally bestselling author and celebrated scientist Tim Flannery, a history of Europe unlike any before: an ecological account of the land itself and the forces shaping life on it.

Juliette

by Marquis de Sade

“The Marquis is a missionary. He has written a new religion. Juliette is one of the holy books.” —The New York Times Book Review…

Turn of Mind

by Alice LaPlante

“[Like] Anna Quindlen’s Every Last One—a dread-filled, unputdownable page-turner . . . Skillfully written in the memory-loss first person, the book combines murder mystery with family drama, bringing new meaning…