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Who’s Who in Hell

by Robert Chalmers

“Thoroughly engaging, delightful and very funny. . . . [Who’s Who in Hell] is a coming-of-age story set in a post-Thatcherite world. . . . A love story that avoids…

The Tale of the Allergist’s Wife & Other Plays

by Charles Busch

“An uproarious, window-rattling comedy of midlife malaise . . . Busch demonstrates a sure gift for hearty comedy. . . . The Allergist’s Wife earns its wall-to-wall laughs.” —Ben Brantley,…

The Old Ball Game

by Frank Deford

“[Deford] tips a journalist’s fedora, rather than a child’s cap, to one of the most remarkable pairings in sports history.” –Alan Schwarz, The New York Times Book Review…

O Solo Homo

by Holly Hughes

“Naked passion, fiery intellect and dissatisfaction with the status quo mark all good performance art. This collection embodies those elements at their best. Each piece makes you sit up and…

Night in the Afternoon & Other Erotica

by Caroline Lamarche

“Like the title, which recalls Belle de Jour, might suggest, [Night in the Afternoon] is, but is not merely, a short libertine novel. . . . It is masterful, from…

How the Soldier Repairs the Gramophone

by Sasa Stanisic

“In Sasa Stanisic’s bittersweet, musical novel about a boy growing up in Bosnia-Herzogovina before and during the war, many things happen that are impossible to understand, startlingly visual, bordering on…

The Hidden Oasis

by Paul Sussman

The third novel from international best-selling author Paul Sussman, The Hidden Oasis is an action-packed thriller about an American mountain climber and a British professor who set out to solve…

The English Major

by Jim Harrison

“Harrison spins the common chaff of a road trip into gold. . . . peppered with his characteristic insights and asides. . . . After a long and idiosyncratic literary…

Drawing Conclusions

by Donna Leon

The landmark twentieth novel in the celebrated Commissario Guido Brunetti series.

The Blue Room

by David Hare

“[Hare’s] play slides up on one insidiously–always suggesting more than they first suggest, planting depth charges in the mind, subtly laying a minefield in the self-confidence of one’s first impressions.”…