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If You Didn’t Bring Jerky, What Did I Just Eat?

by Bill Heavey

…be read and re-read for years and probably for generations.” —Patrick F. McManus, New York Times best-selling author of The Bear in the Attic and A Fine and Pleasant Misery…

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 Gombrowicz

From “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 Forever Prisoner

by Catherine Scott-Clark and Adrian Levy

Some argued it would save the U.S. after 9/11. Instead, the CIA’s enhanced interrogation program came to be defined as American torture. The Forever Prisoner, a primary source for the…

Brass

by Helen Walsh

“In Brass, Walsh has created some of literature’s sexiest sex scenes, most out-of-it drug-taking . . . and imagery you won’t easily scrub off the back of your mind. It…

The Raw and the Cooked

by Jim Harrison

…him bigger than life or overbearing, Jim Harrison has staked out a distinctive place in the world of food writing.” —Jane and Michael Stern, The New York Times Book Review…

Napoleon’s Exile

by Patrick Rambaud

“Enfeebled, sick, dispirited, abandoned, the ruler only becomes more fascinating. The epoch is no more, but the intimate Napoleon replaces it. No hagiography or biography, we discover here a man—simple,…

My Friend the Mercenary

by James Brabazon

“Intensely vivid story of war and the peculiar breed of warriors who fight in 21st-century Africa. . . A haunting memoir and tribute to an extraordinary comrade-at-arms.” —Kirkus Reviews…