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Worm: the First Digital World War, by Mark Bowden

by Mark Bowden

The fascinating story of the Conficker computer worm and the cyber security elites who have joined forces in a high-tech game of cops and robbers to find its creators and…

Neil LaBute

…wrote and directed for London and New York in 2001; and bash: latter-day plays, which LaBute wrote and directed for New York and London in 1999. Other plays include Filthy…

Dagoberto Gilb

…the Texas Institute of Letters’ Dobie Paisano Fellowship. The Magic of Blood (1993) was first published not in New York, but in New Mexico, and, defying expectations, won the 1994…

The Answer Is Never

by Jocko Weyland

…as a kid–what it’s like to awaken to a sense of possibility, and to realize that what you’ve grown up with is not what you’re stuck with.” –The New Yorker…

Love for Sale

by Nils Johan Ringdal

“Contains enough scholarly detail to allow one to employ the “I read Playboy for the articles’ defense.” –Jared Paul Stern, New York Post…

Let’s Put the Future Behind Us

by Jack Womack

…the phantasmagoric Moscow in Mikhail Bulgakov’s The Master and Margarita. . . . I urge you not to miss this often hilarious but ultimately horrific novel.” –The New York Observer…

Not a Happy Camper

by Mindy Schneider

“Hilarious . . . [Mindy Schneider] draws a funny portrait of her younger self in a summer setting that anyone who has ever drunk bug juice will cringingly recognize.” —Kate…

How I Became a Famous Novelist

by Steve Hely

“If this book doesn’t make you laugh, you may need a new funny bone.” —Kyle Smith, People (4 stars)…

The Siege

by Helen Dunmore

…five people huddle in one freezing room and Dunmore describes what is happening to them in language that is elegantly, starkly beautiful.” –Janice P. Nimura, New York Times Book Review…

Our Lady of the Flowers

by Jean Genet

“Elegiac elegance, alternately muted, languorous, vituperative, tender, glamorous, bitchy, lush, mockingly feminine, “high camp,” overripe, vigorous, rigorous, exalted. . . . A remarkable achievement.” –The New York Times Book Review…