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Mozart in the Jungle

by Blair Tindall

“Her description of life in the famous Allendale building…is delightful, as are her portraits of fellow musicians and her stories of life in the pit.” –Susan Salter Reynolds, Los Angeles…

Moloch

by Henry Miller

“A work of extraordinary political consciousness, predicated upon the longing savagely to corrode, or better yet, explode the foundations of a world of wage slavery and commercial empires. . ….

Manual of Zen Buddhism

by D.T. Suzuki

‘suzuli’s works on Zen Buddhism are among the best contributions to the knowledge of living Buddhism . . . We cannot be sufficiently grateful to the author, first for the…

Mantrapped

by Fay Weldon

“In Weldon’s skillful hands, the obsessions of nineties London are picked apart to wonderfully comic effect. . . . If you can just keep up with Weldon’s madcap journey, Mantrapped…

Logic

by Olympia Vernon

“Yes, in the land of American Idol and The Bachelor, there remains a segment of the public that relishes experimental fiction that challenges the heart and the mind. Vernon’s second…

Letters to a Teacher

by Sam Pickering

“Pickering’s odd timelessness–his ideas seem simultaneously old-fashioned and up-to-date–and his warm wisdom . . . will please educators and interested lay readers alike.” –Publishers Weekly…

The Last Stand of Fox Company

by Bob Drury

From the best-selling authors of Halsey’s Typhoon (“Powerful and engrossing,” Mark Bowden), this is the true story of a Marine company’s heroic last stand during America’s “Forgotten War.”…

The Last Crossing

by Guy Vanderhaeghe

“[Vanderhaeghe is] a Dickensian sensationalist. His flair for the lurid can be exquisite. . . . Epic novels can be loose, baggy monsters, but this one is stuffed with enough…

Kornwolf

by Tristan Egolf

“The voice is unforgettable, at times attaining the incantatory power of Whitman’s ‘barbaric yawp.’” –New Yorker…

Kitchen

by Banana Yoshimoto

“Ms. Yoshimoto’s writing is lucid, earnest and disarming, as emotionally observant as Jane Smiley’s, as fluently readable as Anne Tyler’s. . . . [It] seizes hold of the reader’s sympathy…