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Turpentine
by Spring Warren“With a pitch-perfect narrator and a smorgasbord of sensory detail, Spring Warren brings the Old West back to life. Turpentine casts the rebirth of a privileged young man finding self-truth…
Rivers of Blood, Rivers of Gold
by Mark Cocker“Cocker has written a book on a broad subject, the kind that professional historians too rarely produce. . . . Rivers of Blood, Rivers of Gold is a heroic attempt…
Mukiwa
by Peter Godwin“From time to time a book comes out of Africa that is so good it grips American readers by their hearts. This should be one of them.” –The Washington Post…
The Human Zoo
by Sabina MurrayA blistering new novel that follows a Filipino American journalist’s return to dictatorship-ruled Manila to research her book on tribes from a “cracklingly original” (Elle) and “singular” (New York Times…
Uncle Vanya
by Anton Chekhov“An act of deconstruction designed to exhume the living energies of Chekhov’s writing from under the heavy weight of ‘masterpiece topsoil.’” –Robert Brustein, American Repertory Theatre…
Salty
by Mark Haskell Smith“[Mark Haskell Smith’s] characters include a not-so-usual suspect lineup of hustlers, sex addicts, supermodels, failed rock stars, wine-buff cops, psychos and flakes. Haskell Smith writes well, especially about sex and…
Playing
by Melanie Abrams“Playing is an audacious erotic debut novel that chills, thrills, shocks and enthralls. Through the story of a young American woman’s love for a dark, handsome, older stranger, Melanie Abrams…
Grove at Home: December 13-19
…lessons the Democratic Party can learn from the voting patterns of the Asian-American community — or, perhaps better said, from “enormously diverse” Asian-American communities, since, as Nguyen notes, “the category…
Read dangerously this Banned Books Week (and Beyond)!
…of Cancer by Henry Miller Now hailed as an American classic, Henry Miller’s masterpiece was banned as obscene in this country for twenty-seven years after its first publication in Paris…