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The Grove Companion to Samuel Beckett
by C.J. Ackerley and Stanley Gontarski“Ackerley and Gontarski have amassed an amazing amount of information about Samuel Beckett and his works, which constitutes The Grove Companion. The volume will prove useful to everyone–from the neophyte…
Alif the Unseen
by G. Willow WilsonFrom the author of award-winning graphic novels comes a stunning and propulsive debut novel, blending cyberpunk adventure with the enchantment of Middle Eastern mythology.
Let’s Put the Future Behind Us
by Jack Womack“Remarkable . . . Mr. Womack has enmeshed his character in a Moscow landscape as absurd and scary as the phantasmagoric Moscow in Mikhail Bulgakov’s The Master and Margarita. ….
The Natural Order of Things
by António Lobo Antunes“The Natural Order of Things . . . reads like William Faulkner or Céline . . . gorgeous . . . bedeviled [and] lyrical . . . a remarkable writer.”…
1942
by Winston GroomFrom the author of Forrest Gump and A Storm in Flanders, a riveting chronicle of America’s most critical hour….
Last Words
by William S. Burroughs“Last Words . . . presents fresh cues to the larger design of [Burroughs’s] imagination, and a means of gaining a renewed perspective on his work.” –The New York Times…
The Retreat
by Patrick Rambaud“In The Retreat, a novel much praised for its level of historical detail, French writer Patrick Rambaud locates little grandeur in the ghastly carnage of Napoleon’s retreat from Moscow. ….
Mr. Darwin’s Shooter
by Roger McDonald“Earthy, economical prose . . . wisdom and subtle understanding . . . Evolution, as Mr. Darwin’s Shooter demonstrates, is driven by forces more nuanced and mysterious than the crude…
Ray
by Barry Hannah…finally put it down. Barry Hannah is a talent to reckon with, and I can only hope that Ray finds an audience it deserves.” –Harry Crews, Washington Post Book World…
The Dressing Station
by Jonathan Kaplan‘refreshingly unsentimental . . . His descriptions of surgery are unflinching. . . . Kaplan gives us a remarkable self-portrait of the war junkie. . . . Though he lets…