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Open Water
by Caleb Azumah NelsonA stunning first novel about two young Black artists in London falling in and out of love by a new literary virtuoso, and finalist for the BBC Short Story Award,…
Sicily ’43
by James HollandA major new history of one of World War II’s most crucial campaigns—the first Allied attack on European soil—by the acclaimed author of Normandy ’44 and a rising star in…
Transient Desires
by Donna LeonIn the landmark thirtieth installment of the bestselling series the New Yorker has called “an unusually potent cocktail of atmosphere and event,” Guido Brunetti is forced to confront an unimaginable…
Girl, Woman, Other
by Bernardine EvaristoFrom one of Britain’s most celebrated writers of color, a magnificent portrayal of the intersections of identity among an interconnected group of Black British women
The Western Wind
by Samantha HarveyHailed as “this generation’s Virginia Woolf” (Telegraph) and “one of the UK’s most exquisite stylists” (Guardian), Samantha Harvey’s breathtaking new novel is a medieval mystery told in reverse over the…
Sharp
by Michelle DeanFrom celebrated literary critic Michelle Dean, a powerful portrait of ten women writers who managed to make their voices heard amid a culture of sexism
The Retreat of Western Liberalism
by Edward Luce…expounds on the erosion of the West’s middle classes, the dysfunction among its political and economic elites, and the consequences for America and the world.” —Michiko Kakutani, New York Times…
Young Skins
by Colin BarrettFrom a major new talent in international fiction, whom Colm Tóibín has hailed as “exciting and stylistically adventurous,” comes a propulsive, urgent portrait of dislocated Irish youth….
The Witch of Hebron
by James Howard KunstlerThe best-selling author of The Long Emergency returns with a gripping sequel to his novel World Made by Hand, which Alan Cheuse of National Public Radio called “brilliant.”…
Voltaire in Exile
by Ian Davidson…a state. How this came about, and without any Tolstoyan repentance or self-remaking, is one of the great stories of literary evolution. Davidson tells it well.” –Adam Gopnik, New Yorker…