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The Industrial Revolutionaries
by Gavin Weightman…characters across continents and centuries, forging a genuinely global history that brings the collaborative, if competitive, business of industrial innovation to life.” —Stephen Mihm, The New York Times Book Review…
The Good Doctor
by Damon Galgut…and bracing story, but he’s also in pursuit of something murkier: the double-edged nature of doing good in a land where “the past has only just happened.”” –The New Yorker…
Fortune’s Bastard
by Robert Chalmers“A spontaneous seduction prompts a surreal chain of events in this raucous new novel. . . . This is a wry, writhing tale about the forces that shape our fate.”…
A Few Stout Individuals
by John Guare“Vivacious. Individuals is . . . so unmistakably the product of Mr. Guare’s exotic yet very American imagination.” —Ben Brantley, The New York Times…
The Steal
by Mark Bowden and Matthew Teague“A gripping ground-level narrative…a marvel of reporting.”—Washington Post “A lean, fast-paced and important account of the chaotic final weeks.”—New York Times In The Steal, veteran journalists Mark Bowden and Matthew…
City of the Mind
by Penelope Lively…sensuous prose tempers the metaphysical abstractions. . . . Her uncanny empathy and ability to evoke emotion make the reader feel more like a participant than like an observer.” –Newsday…
Charlie Wilson’s War
by George Crile“Americans often ask: ‘Where have all the heroes gone?’ Well a lot of them come roaring through in this tour de force of reporting and writing. Tom Clancy’s fiction pales…
The Bullet Trick
by Louise Welsh“Delivers both the erotic tingle and the frisson of revulsion some of us feel when exploring a decadent subculture. . . . One of the most exciting new writers in…
Black Skin, White Masks
by Frantz Fanon“A strange, haunting mélange of analysis, revolutionary manifesto, metaphysics, prose poetry and literary criticism—and yet the nakedest of human cries.” —Newsweek…
The American Home Front: 1941-1942
by Alistair Cooke“Revealing portrait. . . . A vivid, endlessly interesting view of the home front.” —Kirkus Reviews…