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1989

by Val McDermid

In the new installment to her historical crime series that began with 1979, internationally bestselling author Val McDermid delivers a propulsive new thriller that finds journalist Allie Burns has become…

Travesties

by Tom Stoppard

A speculative portrait of what could have been the meeting of three profoundly influential men—James Joyce, the Dadaist founder Tristan Tzara, and Lenin—in a germinal Europe

The Terrors of Ice and Darkness

by Christoph Ransmayr

“Christoph Ransmayr has written a curious novel that conveys the distancing, the numbness, of Arctic. . . . Ransmayr’s real protagonist is obsession itself, the call of the wild.” –Los…

Surreal Lives

by Ruth Brandon

“Surrealism is now associated more with whimsy than with the lacerating and uncanny effects first sought by the French poets who first formulated its principles . . . [Surreal Lives…

Song of Napalm

by Bruce Weigl

“Song of Napalm is more than a collection of beautifully wrought, heart-wrenching and often very funny poems… Weigl may have written the best novel so far about the Vietnam War,…

Second Person Singular

by Sayed Kashua

“With Second Person Singular, Sayed Kashua has become one of the most important contemporary Hebrew writers.” —Haaretz…

Pornografia

by Witold Gombrowicz

“A master of verbal burlesque, a connoisseur of psychological blackmail, Gombrowicz is one of the profoundest late moderns, with one of the lightest touches.” —John Updike…

Paradise Lust

by Brook Wilensky-Lanford

“Paradise Lust is a pleasure. Wilensky-Lanford tackles her subject with an appealing mix of serious research and tongue-in-cheek humor. Neither too academic nor too whimsical, the storytelling in Paradise Lust…

Midnight Cactus

by Bella Pollen

“Seductive and disturbing ” Alice Coleman is an entertaining heroine.” ––Ann Cummins, San Francisco Chronicle…

Loving Che

by Ana Menéndez

“A beautiful and quite possible reinvention of history.” –Alan Cheuse, NPR…