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Arafat’s War

by Efraim Karsh

…But in this eye-opening and exhaustively researched book, Karsh shows us that it is in a large part the product of a single man’s pathological will.” –The New York Post…

Old World, New World

by Kathleen Burk

“This stunning and important work is destined to become the benchmark study of this topic for many years to come.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)…

The Postmoderns: The New American Poetry Revised

by Donald M. Allen

United by their “postmodernist” concerns with spontaneity, “instantism,” formal and syntactic flexibility, and the revelation of both the creator and the process through the writing itself, these 38 poets represent…

Party Time and The New World Order

by Harold Pinter

“Party Time‘s last loaded encounter is better than anything Pinter has written in years.” —The Times (London)…

New Japanese Voices

by Helen Mitsios

“A happy marriage of contemporary Western culture with the traditional Japanese sensibility makes this story collection by young Japanese writers a worthwhile successor to a distinguished literary past.” –Kirkus Reviews…

Amedee, The New Tenant, Victims of Duty

by Eugene Ionesco

“There is not a dramatist . . . who can make furniture speak as eloquently as Ionesco, and here he makes it the perfect, the terrifying symbol of the deranged…

Triangle

by David Von Drehle

…best, a magnificent portrayal not only of the catastrophe but also of the time and the turbulent city in which it took place.” –Kevin Baker, New York Times Book Review…

Harlem

by Jonathan Gill

“[A] panoramic history . . . Gill blends high-density research, political and cultural sophistication, and narrative drive to produce an epic worthy of its fabled subject.” —Edward Kosner, The Wall…

Euphoria

by Lily King

…a landscape of exotic menace—a love triangle in extremis . . . The steam the book emits is as much intellectual as erotic.” —New York Times Book Review (cover review)…

Seven Mile Beach

by Tom Gilling

…that comes partly, one suspects, from the author’s demanding more of his main character than any satanic real estate agent ever would.” —Josh Bazell, The New York Times Book Review…