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The Zanzibar Chest
by Aidan Hartley“An extraordinary and heartbreaking book, the finest account of a war correspondent’s psychic wracking since Michael Herr’s Dispatches, and the best white writing from Africa in many, many years.” —Rian…
Five Tuesdays in Winter
by Lily KingBy the award-winning, New York Times bestselling author of Writers & Lovers and Euphoria comes a masterful new collection of short stories…
Second Violin
by John Lawton“Smart and gracefully written . . . It has been Lawton’s achievement to capture, in first-rate popular fiction, the courage and drama—and the widespread tomorrow-we-may-die exuberance—of that terrible and thrilling…
Fentanyl, Inc.
by Ben WesthoffA remarkable four-year investigation into the dangerous world of synthetic drugs—from black market drug factories in China to users and dealers on the streets of the U.S. to harm reduction…
Four Points of the Compass
by Jerry BrottonFrom the New York Times bestselling author of A History of the World in 12 Maps, this is the revelatory history of the four cardinal directions that have oriented and…
Welcome to Our 2022 Gift Guide
…a propulsive new thriller that finds journalist Allie Burns promoted to an editor, and as the Cold War and AIDS crisis deliver a nonstop tide of news, most of it…
The Eternal Frontier
by Tim Flannery“A sweeping natural history of North America from its birth as a self-contained continent in the Cretaceous Era to its current precarious status as an ecological superpower. . . ….
Here Lies
by Olivia Clare FriedmanThe debut novel from the “Munro-esque” (Houston Post) author of Disasters in the First World, Here Lies is Olivia Clare Friedman’s visceral and portentous look at mourning, memory, and motherhood…
Wild Minds
by Reid MitenbulerThe vivid and untold story of the Golden Age of classic animation and the often larger-than-life artists who created some of the most iconic cartoon characters of the twentieth century
World Made by Hand
by James Howard Kunstler“Far from a typical post-apocalyptic novel. It caters neither to a pseudo-morbid nor faddishly slick vision of the future. Though grim with portent, it is ultimately, as Camus’s novel The…