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Cold Mountain
by Charles Frazier“Charles Frazier has taken on a daunting task–and has done extraordinarily well by it… a Whitmanesque foray into America: into its hugeness, its freshness, its scope and its soul.” —James…
The Boyfriend
by Thomas Perry“There are probably only half a dozen suspense writers now alive who can be depended upon to deliver high-voltage shocks, vivid, sympathetic characters, and compelling narratives each time they publish….
By the Shore
by Galaxy Craze“Breathtaking. . . . Craze is note-perfect from beginning to end.” —San Francisco Chronicle…
Flesh Wounds
by John Lawton“Few novelists have given me more pleasure in recent years than John Lawton. . . . Lawton writes with such style, intelligence, irreverence, political sophistication and keen understanding of the…
The Blacks
by Jean Genet“Genet has strong claims to be considered the greatest living playwright. His plays constitute a body of work unmatched for poetic and theatrical power which reaches, in at least two…
The Best a Man Can Get
by John O'Farrell“[A] bright, hilarious little novel . . . O’Farrell has a tart narrative voice and a delectably understated way with wisecracks. You could say that his style depends heavily on…
The Best Bad Dream
by Robert WardFrom award-winning novelist Robert Ward, a story about an FBI agent who falls in love with a glamorous snitch who leads him straight into trouble.
The Beastly Beatitudes of Balthazar B
by J.P. Donleavy“Donleavy at his best, eloquent, roguish . . . at one with his world and the terrible sadness it contains.” —Newsweek…
The Beans of Egypt, Maine
by Carolyn Chute“Chute’s novel pulses with kinetic energy. It seizes the reader on its opening page with a rhythm, a language, a knock-about country humor unmistakably its own.” —Newsweek…
About My Life and the Kept Woman
by John Rechy“A small-town lad’s awakening, sexual and intellectual–which takes him to big-city demimondes and books that begged, in their day, to be banned. . . . Keenly observed and well-written–readers will…