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Throwim Way Leg
by Tim Flannery…to their magnificent land. . . . [Flannery’s] evocations of the New Guinea landscape carry you away.” –D. J. R. Bruckner, The New York Times Book Review (front cover review)…
Freeman’s: Arrival
by John FreemanA new anthology from renowned literary critic John Freeman, Freeman’s: Arrival features never before published stories by Haruki Murakami, Louise Erdrich, Dave Eggers, Etgar Keret, Lydia Davis, David Mitchell, and…
Why the Devil Chose New England for His Work
by Jason Brown“One quality that makes these stories feel unmistakably new is Brown’s . . . seamless, oddly cinematic shifts among points of view. . . . He has a gift for…
A God Strolling in the Cool of the Evening
by Mário de Carvalho…moral code, as well as a provocative meditation on the difficulty of leading a virtuous life in an era of tumultuous change.” –Erik Burns, The New York Times Book Review…
A Fairy Tale of New York
by J.P. Donleavy“J.P. Donleavy is a writer of explosive, winning imagination.” —The New York Times Book Review…
Grove at Home: December 6-12
…a leader of the Black Arts Movement, a resounding activist voice in his native Newark, a key figure in the “New American Poetry,” a vocal participant in worldwide Marxist writing,…
Freeman’s: The Future of New Writing
by John FreemanA special issue of the journal that has fast become a fixture in the literary landscape, Freeman’s: The Future of New Writing announces a global list of poets, fiction writers,…
The New Book of Lists
by David Wallechinsky“Packed with more fascinating, trivial, vital, and perverse non sequiturs than you can shake an encyclopedia at.” –The New York Times Book Review…
Rouse Up O Young Men of the New Age!
by Kenzaburo Oe“Rouse Up is a series of linked, meditative stories that examine Nobel laureate Oe’s changing relationship with his adolescent brain-damaged son through the prism of [William] Blake’s poetry . ….
Grove New American Theatre
by Michael Feingold“[Ethyl Eichelberger] is…a rare and idiosyncratic comic spirit . . . [He] punctured pretension while retaining his sense of the ridiculous.” –The New York Times…