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Tokyo Doesn’t Love Us Anymore
by Ray Loriga“Loriga’s gorgeous, enigmatic new novel . . . could be described in terms of its premise . . . but such a description cheats the prospective reader, because the true…
Thirteen Hours
by Deon Meyer“Deon Meyer is one of the unsung masters. Thirteen Hours proves he should be on everyone’s reading list. This book is great!” —Michael Connelly…
Stories and Texts for Nothing
by Samuel Beckett“This volume of Beckett miniatures–three longish stories and thirteen vignettes, [comprises] fragments from the finest body of work produced by any [contemporary] writer.” –Newsweek…
St. Petersburg
by Andrey Biely“There is nothing like a ticking time bomb to supply fictional suspense, and perhaps no other writer has ever used the device more successfully than Andrey Biely in St. Petersburg…
The Sound of One Hand Clapping
by Richard Flanagan“Heart-wrenching and beautifully written . . . A rare and remarkable achievement . . . Flanagan blends a strong yet delicate psychological sensibility with . . . sharp, vivid, original…
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,…
Shooting Elvis
by Robert Eversz“Whip smart . . . Best described as punk noir, it takes the sardonic bite of Raymond Chandler and sets it to the mosh-pit madness of Green Day. An exciting…
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…
The School on Heart’s Content Road
by Carolyn Chute…beautiful novel. . . . [The School on Heart’s Content Road is] a love song to a part of America that doesn’t have much of a voice, and is armed….
The Pleasure of Eliza Lynch
by Anne Enright…life that make the same kind of convoluted sense as the images that crowd our dreams is one of the many pleasures this novel has to offer.” —Conan Putnam, The…