Search Results for: American Airlines 1800-299-7264 New Booking Number
Meeting the Master
by Elissa Wald“Elissa Wald, a veteran of what vanilla reviewers call “the S/M scene,” brings new meaning to the term “literary submission.”. . . If you’re looking for a good erotic read,…
I Love You More Than You Know
by Jonathan Ames“Ames delivers more droll, exhibitionistic essays about his romantic misadventures, his beloved great-aunt and (of course) his underwear. His hyperkinetic readings are never less than joyous.” –Time Out New York…
Happiness
by Darrin M. McMahon…of these and dozens of lesser thinkers are lucidly presented in fine, sturdy prose that is, on the whole, a delight to read.” –Jim Holt, New York Times Book Review…
Betty’s Summer Vacation
by Christopher Durang“With a style that incorporates Brechtian alienation and Alfred Jarry grotesquerie, the deliriously assaultive, brashly funny Vacation defines to perfection the lurid, scandal-starved past decade.” –Erik Jackson, Time Out New…
The Possessed
by Witold GombrowiczFrom “a master of verbal burlesque [and] a connoisseur of psychological blackmail” (John Updike), Witold Gombrowicz’s harrowing and hilarious pastiche of the Gothic novel, now in a new, authoritative English…
The Deserter’s Tale
by Joshua Key“Destined to become part of the literature of the Iraq war . . . Key’s clear voice rings out . . . with anguish and a frankness that invests the…
What It Takes to Get to Vegas
by Yxta Maya Murray…is at once specifically American in its rhythms and syntax, and indisputably female. . . . Rita Zapata is who Holden Caufield would want to be if he were alive…
Wild Minds
by Reid MitenbulerThe vivid and untold story of the Golden Age of classic animation and the often larger-than-life artists who created some of the most iconic cartoon characters of the twentieth century
Mozart in the Jungle
by Blair Tindall“Her description of life in the famous Allendale building…is delightful, as are her portraits of fellow musicians and her stories of life in the pit.” –Susan Salter Reynolds, Los Angeles…
The Man Who Fell in Love with the Moon
by Tom Spanbauer…it is dark, full of fictional and philosophical pleasures, a quirky, unsettling look at American history and a vision quest in the grand old tradition.” –Los Angeles Times Book Review…