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History of Wolves

by Emily Fridlund

A BEA Buzz Book Selection and one of the most daring literary debuts of the season, a profound and propulsive novel from an urgent new voice in American fiction.

The Flowers

by Dagoberto Gilb

…not when you meet the precocious, Holden Caufieldesque narrator of Dagoberto Gilb’s coming-of-age novel . . . Sonny’s voice is mesmeric. It keeps us reading.” —Sarah Fay, New York Times…

Father of the Rain

by Lily King

Award-winning author Lily King’s new novel spans three decades in a riveting psychological portrait of a wildly charismatic patriarch as seen through the eyes of his daughter….

Family Meals

by Michael Tucker

Foreign Language, Michael Tucker’s Family Meals is a heartwarming book about family and the challenges of caring for an aging parent, set in Italy, Santa Barbara, and New York City….

Correspondents

by Tim Murphy

“Murphy artfully connects multiple narratives to produce a sprawling tale of love, family, duty, war, and displacement. It is above all a stinging indictment of the ill-fated war in Iraq…

a: A Novel

by Andy Warhol

…but he is funny . . . The characters of a represent the bizarre new class, untermenschen prefigurations of the technological millennium.” –Robert Mazzocco, The New York Review of Books…

Expats

by Christopher Dickey

…and sensitivity, Mr. Dickey unveils this new Arabia, shaped by the sometimes creative, always skeptical tension between the Arab and the expatriate.” –Sandra Mackey, The New York Times Book Review…

Blasphemy

by Sherman Alexie

New and selected stories from two decades of writing by the National Book Award-winning, best-selling, inimitable national treasure, Sherman Alexie.

New York Times Review: The Retreat of Western Liberalism

In ‘The Retreat of Western Liberalism,’ How Democracy Is Defeating Itself In his insightful and harrowing new book, Edward Luce, a columnist for The Financial Times, issues a chilling warning:…

New York Times Raves About Lights On, Rats Out

…take the risk of being judged not only on the quality of their prose but on the content of their character. In a self-promoting culture, they dare to lead with…