Search Results for: VIPREG2024 how to use promo code in 1xbet Sudan
Quiet Days in Clichy
by Henry MillerHenry Miller’s celebration of love, art, and the Bohemian life at a time when the world was simpler and slower….
Querelle
by Jean Genet“Querelle is a sailor, assassin, dealer in opium, homosexual, thief, and traitor. . . . Genet takes seriously the threat latent in sexuality, and drags us with him to a…
The Pleasure of Eliza Lynch
by Anne Enright“A powerhouse of vivid contrast and contradiction. . . . In a swashbuckling prologue replete with arresting sexual imagery, Enright lays bare her novel’s epic sweep. . . . Like…
Playing
by Melanie Abrams“Playing is an audacious erotic debut novel that chills, thrills, shocks and enthralls. Through the story of a young American woman’s love for a dark, handsome, older stranger, Melanie Abrams…
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…
Once Is Not Enough
by Jacqueline Susann“[Susann’s] pulp poetry resonates to this day. With her formula of sex, drugs and show business, Susann didn’t so much capture the tenor of her times as she did predict…
Old World, New World
by Kathleen Burk“This stunning and important work is destined to become the benchmark study of this topic for many years to come.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)…
The Normal Heart and The Destiny of Me
by Larry Kramer“The blood that’s coursing through The Normal Heart is boiling hot. There can be little doubt that it is the most outspoken play round.” –Frank Rich, The New York Times…
NK3
by Michael TolkinFrom the acclaimed Hollywood writer/director and author of The Player and Among the Dead, a panoramic vision—suspenseful, comedic, prophetic—set in a near-future California that has been devastated by NK3, a…
Much Depends On Dinner
by Margaret Visser“Fascinating . . . Margaret Visser is a gifted informal writer, and these chapters combine a wealth of unusual information with extreme readability. . . . In short, Visser whetted…