fbpx

Search Results for: VIPREG2024 onexbet promo code Papua New Guinea

Jamie Quatro

…in the New Yorker, Paris Review, New York Review of Books and Ploughshares. She is the recipient of fellowships from MacDowell, Yaddo, and Maison Dora Maar, and teaches in the…

Happy Family

by Wendy Lee

“Rich and multilayered, Lee’s novel explores what it means to be a part of something, whether it’s a family or a culture. Told in Hua’s sparse, somber voice, the story…

Larry Kramer

…Mayor of America’s “largest northeastern city.” Its New York production, starring Kathleen Chalfont, Tonya Pinkens, and David Margulies was prized by the few who came to see it. His 1978…

Devin Leonard

…a senior writer at Fortune and a staff writer for the New York Observer, he has also written for the New York Times, New York, Wired, and many other publications….

Dorian

by Will Self

…in its very freedom and frankness. . . . There’s no denying Self’s novel’s cleverness, best displayed in its neatly postmodern ending.” —Sophie Harrison, The New York Times Book Review…

Goodnight, Beautiful Women

by Anna Noyes

An electrifying debut by sensational new literary talent Anna Noyes, Goodnight, Beautiful Women surveys the residents of small New England coastal towns in tales that probe boundaries of familial intimacy,…

High Lonesome

by Barry Hannah

…today. . . . High Lonesome collects thirteen stories, a handful of them of startling unexpectedness, with moods and interior storms that cannot be found anywhere else.” –The New Republic…

Landscape of the Body

by John Guare

“Whenever [Guare’s] imagination takes over, whenever his astonishing dramatic talent for creating characters and lines and scenes is let loose, he is invaluable.” —The New Yorker…

Charles Busch

…Queen Amarantha, and Shanghai Moon. His play Vampire Lesbians of Sodom ran five years in New York and is one of the longest running plays in Off-Broadway history. In 1988,…

Try

by Dennis Cooper

…. As improbable as it may seem, Dennis Cooper has written a love story, all the more poignant because it is so brutally crushed.” –The New York Times Book Review…