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9 Must-Read Banned Books
…Libraries Confidential Challenge Support School Library Journal The Freedom to Read Foundation School Book Challenge Resource Center Intellectual Freedom and Censorship Q&A LeRoy C. Merritt Humanitarian Fund Intellectual Freedom Consulting…
Women in Love and Other Dramatic Writings
by Larry Kramer“A valuable showcase of an important writer’s early career. . . . The centerpiece of the book is Kramer’s masterful script for Women in Love. . . . A movie…
What Just Happened?
by Art Linson“Art Linson puts a film freak exactly where he or she wants to be: in the Fox screening room during the studio brass’s horrified first look at Fight Club ….
Rock ’n’ Roll
by Tom Stoppard“One of the great political plays in the English language.”—Sunday Times (UK)…
Once Is Not Enough
by Jacqueline Susann“[Susann’s] pulp poetry resonates to this day. With her formula of sex, drugs and show business, Susann didn’t so much capture the tenor of her times as she did predict…
The Long Night of White Chickens
by Francisco Goldman“A remarkable novel. . . . Accruing vivid new details at every turn, Roger’s account gives the reader the most immediate possible sense of a country and its people, the…
In the Boom Boom Room
by David RabeFrom David Rabe, a piercing look at a society dangerously close to our own lives, and a drama that captures both our hearts and our heads.
Hawthorne in Concord
by Philip McFarland“McFarland’s book takes the prize for readability. His is an impressionistic account that could only result from sensitivity and empathy for its subject.” —David Locker, Evansville Courier & Press…
The CEO of the Sofa
by P. J. O'Rourke“Not content to rest on his laurels, the bestselling humorist O’Rourke instead settles back on his caustic couch to offer a wide-angled worldview from his own living room, his salon…
Asleep
by Banana Yoshimoto“Ms. Yoshimoto’s writing is lucid, earnest and disarming, as emotionally observant as Jane Smiley’s, as fluently readable as Anne Tyler’s.” –The New York Times…