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Howard Sounes

Howard Sounes was born in London in 1965 and worked as a national newspaper journalist from 1983-1997, principally in Britain, but also in Australia and the United States, latterly for…

Darcey Steinke

…The Guardian (London), Artforum, and The Village Voice. She teaches at Sarah Lawrence College and The New School. She grew up in Virginia and now lives in Brooklyn, New York….

Thomas King

…One (short stories). Toronto: HarperCollins, 1993. 145 pp. New edition, 1999. Green Grass, Running Water (novel). Toronto/New York: HarperCollins/Houghton Mifflin, 1993. 360 pp. Governor General’s Award nominee, 1993. Canadian Authors…

The Cello Suites

by Eric Siblin

…ideally read with Bach’s thirty-six movements playing softly in the background; a recipe for literary rapture.” —Simon Winchester, author of the New York Times best-seller The Professor and the Madman…

Mary Jo Bang

…Washington University in St. Louis. Individual poems have appeared in The New Yorker, The New Republic, Denver Quarterly, New American Writing, The Paris Review, Fence, Best American Poetry (2001, 2004),…

Annabel

by Kathleen Winter

Award-winning Canadian author Kathleen Winter’s Annabel is a stunning debut novel about the family of a mixed-gendered child born into a rural hunting community in the 1960s….

Maggie Paley

…works in New York City. Writing history: In One Door, a play about Edith Wharton and the two architects with whom she built her Lenox house, the Mount. Commissioned and…

William S. Burroughs

…In 1944, Burroughs took an apartment with Jack Kerouac in New York City, where they both became involved in a murder case, from which the work And the Hippos Were…

Warren Leight

…it received an American Theater Critics Association Nomination for Best New Play. In January 2001, Evan Yionoulis directed a Los Angeles production of Glimmer, Glimmer and Shine at the Mark…

Let’s Put the Future Behind Us

by Jack Womack

…the phantasmagoric Moscow in Mikhail Bulgakov’s The Master and Margarita. . . . I urge you not to miss this often hilarious but ultimately horrific novel.” –The New York Observer…