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Mount Clutter
by Sarah Lindsay…the intricate links between people and their origins. . . . Her poems open doors to other worlds and other ways of seeing.” –Melanie Rehak, The New York Times Book…
Meeting the Master
by Elissa Wald“Elissa Wald, a veteran of what vanilla reviewers call “the S/M scene,” brings new meaning to the term “literary submission.”. . . If you’re looking for a good erotic read,…
Living in a Foreign Language
by Michael Tucker“A satisfying look into the good life.” —Publishers Weekly…
In the Shadow of the American Dream
by David Wojnarowicz…have encountered him on the page or on the wall can still admire the raw passion, intelligence, and transforming energy with which he met his fate.” –The New York Times…
If You Didn’t Bring Jerky, What Did I Just Eat?
by Bill Heavey…be read and re-read for years and probably for generations.” —Patrick F. McManus, New York Times best-selling author of The Bear in the Attic and A Fine and Pleasant Misery…
I Love You More Than You Know
by Jonathan Ames“Ames delivers more droll, exhibitionistic essays about his romantic misadventures, his beloved great-aunt and (of course) his underwear. His hyperkinetic readings are never less than joyous.” –Time Out New York…
Doctored Evidence
by Donna Leon…case into a morality tale that gives Leon’s fiction its subtlety and substance and makes us follow Brunetti wherever we must—even into the sea.” —The New York Times Book Review…
Betty’s Summer Vacation
by Christopher Durang“With a style that incorporates Brechtian alienation and Alfred Jarry grotesquerie, the deliriously assaultive, brashly funny Vacation defines to perfection the lurid, scandal-starved past decade.” –Erik Jackson, Time Out New…
Happiness
by Darrin M. McMahon…of these and dozens of lesser thinkers are lucidly presented in fine, sturdy prose that is, on the whole, a delight to read.” –Jim Holt, New York Times Book Review…
Stern
by Bruce Jay Friedman“What makes Friedman more interesting than most of Malamud, Roth and Bellow is the sense he affords of possibilities larger than the doings and undoings of the Jewish urban bourgeois’.What…