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Search Results for: Flight Reservations 1800-299-7264 China Southern Airlines Phone Number

The Normal Heart and The Destiny of Me

by Larry Kramer

“The blood that’s coursing through The Normal Heart is boiling hot. There can be little doubt that it is the most outspoken play round.” –Frank Rich, The New York Times…

The Sweet Smell of Psychosis

by Will Self

“Brilliant, iconoclastic . . . one of Britain’s most original young writers.” –Time…

Uniform Justice

by Donna Leon

“Leon is probably the best mystery writer you’ve never heard of. . . . She uses the relatively small and crime-free canvas of Venice for riffs about Italian life, sexual…

Grove at Home: July 5—11

…on a number of wonderful subjects, including childhood memories of scholastic book fairs, reading aloud with her partner, and the desire to wear Conversations with Toni Morrison around her neck…

Grove at Home: June 7—13

…folks in America. Watts offers up a bit of the history that the book spells out in greater detail, but also touches on a number of other topics — Are…

Forty Thieves

by Thomas Perry

A devilishly plotted chase-and-pursuit novel by “a master of nail-biting suspense” (Los Angeles Times), featuring a husband-and-wife detective team hired to look into the murder of a research scientist….

The Last Narco

by Malcolm Beith

“The Last Narco gracefully captures the heroic struggle of those who dare to stand up to the cartels, and the ways those cartels have tragically corrupted every aspect of Mexican…

The Forever Prisoner

by Catherine Scott-Clark and Adrian Levy

Some argued it would save the U.S. after 9/11. Instead, the CIA’s enhanced interrogation program came to be defined as American torture. The Forever Prisoner, a primary source for the…

Sewer, Gas & Electric

by Matt Ruff

“Ruff is a protean talent. . . . Very much in the absurdist tradition of Pynchon, Heller, Robbins, and Vonnegut, this is a mad romp through a future that Ruff…

Napoleon’s Exile

by Patrick Rambaud

“Enfeebled, sick, dispirited, abandoned, the ruler only becomes more fascinating. The epoch is no more, but the intimate Napoleon replaces it. No hagiography or biography, we discover here a man—simple,…