fbpx

Search Results for: American Airlines 1800-299-7264 New Booking Number

Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit

by Jeanette Winterson

“A daring, unconventional comic novel . . . by employing quirky anecdotes, which are told with romping humor, and by splicing various parables into the narrative, Winterson allows herself the…

Into the Silent Land

by Paul Broks

“[A] thoughtful, accessible look into neuropsychology. . . . Bringing to his investigations an easygoing style enlivened with great enthusiasm, Broks entices readers to follow him further into the unknown…

Gigantic

by Marc Nesbitt

…. . . Beautiful . . . Nesbitt is smart, dark, and funny, like a young Elmore Leonard with a drinking problem.” –Sam Sifton, The New York Times Book Review…

Tom Paine

by John Keane

…character. . . . Provide[s] an engaging perspective on England, America, and France in the tumultuous years of the late eighteenth century.” –Pauline Maier, The New York Times Book Review…

The Circle of Hanh

by Bruce Weigl

“Weigl keeps his readers in cliff-hanging suspense. . . . So powerful is his writing that readers, too, will live among these words. They may not find salvation there, but…

A Place to Stand

by Jimmy Santiago Baca

…me of the rawness of George Orwell combined with the human exuberance of Neruda’s memoirs. . . . This book will have a permanent place in American letters.” —Jim Harrison…

Endpapers

by Alexander Wolff

A sweeping portrait of the turmoil of the twentieth century and the legacy of immigration, as seen through the German-American family of the celebrated book publisher Kurt Wolff

Stone Junction

by Jim Dodge

…It also has a sweetness about it and an indigenous American optimism, as if somewhere out there, beyond the shopping malls, Oz is waiting.”—Michele Slung, New York Times Book Review…

Grove at Home: January 31-February 6

…the test, the germ of the thought originates in Virginia Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own. In the new essay, Bechdel again looks to Woolf, in the context of her…

Wash

by Margaret Wrinkle

…the painful inheritance and implications of such a horrendous moment in American history. . . . Wash is both redemptive and affirming.” —Major Jackson, The New York Times Book Review…