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The Great Wall

by Julia Lovell

“From its title, one expects a history of the Great Wall, and in that she does not disappoint. But she delivers much, much more . . . Lovell’s book is…

Alan Watts

…and was a favorite on the Chicago and California lecture circuits. Through his groundbreaking use of radio and television, he helped introduce a new audience to the joys of Zen…

James William Gibson

…Los Angeles Times, and The Nation. The battle between developers and activists is still ongoing. Gibson is currently writing a book on the environmental movement’s efforts to change how our…

Ruth Brandon

…recent Houdini film. In non-fiction, my principal interest has been to use biography not as an end in itself, but as a way into social and cultural history. I take…

Country of the Blind

by Christopher Brookmyre

“[Brookmyre’s] characters tend to talk like they’ve read a lot of Elmore Leonard and seen a lot of Quentin Tarantino. . . . [His] books are all about broad humor,…

The Waters of Eternal Youth

by Donna Leon

In the twenty-fifth novel in Donna Leon’s celebrated and bestselling series, Venetian Commissario Guido Brunetti finds himself caught up in a tragedy that befell a girl fifteen years earlier….

Sick Girl

by Amy Silverstein

“[Sick Girl] shocked me. It was a revelation. I couldn’t stop reading it. . . . It’s a book that made me shake my head in disbelief with every chapter….

The Rise of Germany, 1939-1941

by James Holland

The first volume in a major, wide-ranging three-volume revisionist history of World War II in Europe, North Africa, and the Atlantic from a highly acclaimed young British historian.

La Bete and Wrong Mountain

by David Hirson

“La B”te is the boldest and most original play to be produced on Broadway in many years, and the rare one that is both serious and funny. It is the…

The Impostor

by Damon Galgut

“Fast-paced and breathless . . . Canning is a memorable creation, a sort of African Gatsby, but without the glamour.” —William Skidelsky, The Observer…