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How I Became a Famous Novelist

by Steve Hely

“If this book doesn’t make you laugh, you may need a new funny bone.” —Kyle Smith, People (4 stars)…

Three books by Banana Yoshimoto, out in Grove paperback for the first time!

…very first time. Born Mahoko Yoshimoto in 1964 (she took on her pen name, she says, “just because I love banana flowers”), Yoshimoto is one of Japan’s most exciting and…

Celebrate Women in Translation Month with Grove Atlantic

…Murata / Translated from Japanese by Ginny Tapley Takemori Keiko Furukura had always been considered a strange child. Working in a convenience store, she finds a predictable world mandated by…

The Healing Land

by Rupert Isaacson

“A more clear-sighted view [of the Bushmen] is long overdue–which makes Rupert Isaacson’s book most welcome.” –The Economist…

The Last Stand of Fox Company

by Bob Drury

From the best-selling authors of Halsey’s Typhoon (“Powerful and engrossing,” Mark Bowden), this is the true story of a Marine company’s heroic last stand during America’s “Forgotten War.”…

The Caprices

by Sabina Murray

“Murray writes stories of fierce intensity, stories that are evocative, distinct, and haunting.” —Claire Messud, The New York Times Book Review…

Worm: the First Digital World War, by Mark Bowden

by Mark Bowden

The fascinating story of the Conficker computer worm and the cyber security elites who have joined forces in a high-tech game of cops and robbers to find its creators and…

The Reluctant Sheriff

by Chris Offutt

Master storyteller Chris Offutt’s acclaimed crime series has been praised by Ian Rankin as “righteous Kentucky noir with top notes of Daniel Woodrell and S. A. Cosby,” and in this…

Yonder Stands Your Orphan

by Barry Hannah

welcome return of a brilliant writer. . . . Hannah . . . writes with twangy vividness, creating sentences that hum with energy and unexpectedness. . . . [A] blunt,…

Low Rent

by Kurt Hollander

“A welcome opportunity for book readers to discover the pleasures of a periodical that was to the Reagan-Bush era what Evergreen Review was to the 1950s. . . . This…