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The Color of Money, Sea of Love, Night & the City

by Richard Price

“Sea of Love confirms what some of us had begun to suspect . . . that the novelist Richard Price has become the best screenwriter in the country.” –David Denby,…

All the Trouble in the World

by P. J. O'Rourke

“One of the funniest, most insightful, dead-on-the-money books of the year.” –Los Angeles Times…

Stargazing

by Peter Hill

…but one gets the sense, which infuses the book with a rare sweetness, that this was the best year in his life.” –Susan Salter Reynolds, Los Angeles Times Book Review…

A Son of Thunder

by Henry Mayer

“A fine job of placing Henry’s idea of republican rectitude in context without ignoring the many ironies of his life as a mediator between the yeomanry and the elite. Best

Snow White and Russian Red

by Dorota Maslowska

“Maslowska’s prose squeals with directionless drive, whizzing like a drug-induced sensory overload: disjointed, formless, unleashed… It tires and invigorates. It also introduces an otherworld of lasting, unusual imagery… Snow White…

The Siege

by Helen Dunmore

“The best historical fiction delivers emotional truth through the lives of imaginary but ordinary people, making it possible to feel the texture of events that have been smoothed out by…

Purgatory

by Ken Bruen

“Bruen is an Irish treasure, holding his own in a line of literary giants including Joyce, Yeats, Wilde, and Beckett. . . . Purgatory may be the best of the…

Poison Flower

by Thomas Perry

New York Times best-selling author Thomas Perry brings back his most beloved character, Jane Whitefield, in the most dangerous case of a long career of helping people whose lives are…

The Perfect War

by James William Gibson

“Powerfully and persuasively, William Gibson tells us why we were in Vietnam. This book is a work of daring brilliance–an eye-opening chronicle of waste and self-delusion.” –Robert Olen Butler…

Over Time

by Frank Deford

“Equal doses of self-deprecating humor and anecdotal history of American sports journalism are the essence of Frank Deford’s entertaining new memoir.” —Chicago Tribune…