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Search Results for: VIPREG2024 1xbet promo code today 2024 Georgia

Wendell Steavenson

Wendell Steavenson was born in New York in 1970 and grew up in London. She wrote for Time magazine before moving to Georgia, where she spent two years living in…

Sarah Lindsay

…New Republic, The Paris Review, The Yale Review, Prairie Schooner, and The Georgia Review. She is the recipient of the Randall Jarrell scholarship awarded by the University of North Carolina…

Boris Akunin

Boris Akunin is the pen name of Grigory Chkhartishvili, who was born in the Republic of Georgia in 1956. A philologist, critic, essayist, and translator of Japanese, Akunin published his…

Jason Brown

…prizes and his work has appeared in publications such as The Best American Short Stories, Harper’s, Open City, TriQuarterly, The Atlantic, and The Georgia Review. His first book was Driving…

Lucien Stryk

…50 anthologies and textbooks, including Contemporary American Poetry, ed. A. Poulin, Jr., Houghton Mifflin. His work has also appeared in American Poetry Review, Encounter, Georgia Review, The Listener, London Magazine,…

Mary-Beth Hughes

…Happiness, which earned a Pushcart Prize. Her stories have been published in The Paris Review, Ploughshares, Georgia Review, and A Public Space. She lives in Brooklyn and Rhinebeck, New York….

A God Strolling in the Cool of the Evening

by Mário de Carvalho

“An absorbing study of a single man’s moral code, as well as a provocative meditation on the difficulty of leading a virtuous life in an era of tumultuous change.” –Erik…

14 Queer Book Recommendations to Read During Pride

…Navid Sinaki (Out August 13, 2024) Sex, vengeance, and betrayal in modern day Tehran—Sinaki’s cinematic debut follows Anjir, a morbid romantic and petty thief whose boyfriend disappears just as they’re…

T.H.U.G. L.I.F.E.

by Sanyika Shakur

“Shakur produces a visceral and strikingly real portrayal of gang life in Los Angeles, replete with sudden and inexplicable violence, revenge, betrayal, ostentatious living, racism, the strong arm of law…

The Lost German Slave Girl

by John Bailey

“Bailey has the gifts of a novelist and a readiness to blend fact and conjecture . . . with the result that The Lost German Slave Girl reads like a…