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The Adding Machine

by William S. Burroughs

A reissue of Burroughs’s selected essays, covering thirty years of writing, touching on subjects ranging from literature to the meaning of life, and providing valuable insight into Burroughs’s own work….

Emmanuelle

by Emmanuelle Arsan

“Lyrical and graphic . . . It’s not all salacious play-by-play. . . . The book’s argument reverberates beyond the erotic.” —Teddy Wayne, NPR…

Elephant Rocks

by Kay Ryan

“The music of these poems is every bit as seductive as their reasoning. Her thinking flaunts the plush, irresistible textures of organic growth; we’d no sooner disagree with it than…

Eighty-Sixed

by David B. Feinberg

“Wickedly fun . . . [Eighty-Sixed] stands out for its frankness, ferocious wit and total lack of sentimentality or self-pity. . . . A harrowing first-person account of gay life…

Eden

by Olympia Vernon

“Daring [and] explosively supernatural. . . . [Eden is] a startling reminder of how forceful Southern magic can be.” –The New York Times Book Review…

The Earth Shall Weep

by James Wilson

“A sweeping, well-written, long-view history of American Indian societies . . . a trustworthy telling of a sad epic of misunderstanding, mayhem, and massacre.” –Kirkus Reviews (starred)…

Dream Work

by Mary Oliver

“Oliver’s poems are thoroughly convincing–as genuine, moving, and implausible as the first caressing breeze of spring.” –The New York Times Book Review…

Dream Angus

by Alexander McCall Smith

“Elegant . . . Spare, polished . . . Smith fluidly weaves in contemporary vignettes.” —Publishers Weekly…

Doctor Sax

by Jack Kerouac

From the most famous of the Beat writers, the semi-autobiographical novel of growing up between dreams and nightmares in early twentieth century Massachusetts, now reissued following Kerouac’s centenary celebration…

Arrow of the Blue-Skinned God

by Jonah Blank

“Possibly the most perceptive book that I have come across on India since the British Raj ended.” –Pranay Gupte, The Washington Post…