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American Nomads

by Richard Grant

“Grant succumbs to indigenous American wanderlust, exploring the land mostly left of the Mississippi in a journey of discovery for himself and other agoraphobics. . . . [American Nomads is]…

Monkey

by Ch'eng-en Wu

This classic combination of picaresque novel and folk epic is probably the most popular book in the history of the Far East.

The Typist

by Michael Knight

…about a green young American posted to the strange realm of post-World War II Japan, where his clear-cut Western values are distinctly challenged over the first year of the occupation….

Transforming Leadership

by James MacGregor Burns

…reading them in light of new sociological and psychological research, [Burns’] latest book aims to put “transforming leadership” at the core of Western values.” –Christopher Caldwell, The New York Times…

Manual of Zen Buddhism

by D.T. Suzuki

…to the author, first for the fact of his having brought Zen closer to Western understanding, and secondly for the manner in which he has achieved the task.” –Carl Jung…

The Breaking of Nations

by Robert Cooper

“Essentially an attempt to bridge the ideological divide between hard and soft power. Both, he suggests in this short, elegant collection of essays, are necessary in today’s messy world.” –The…

Adam Resurrected

by Yoram Kaniuk

“Yoram Kaniuk is one of the most innovative, brilliant novelists in the Western World.” –The New York Times…

New Japanese Voices

by Helen Mitsios

“A happy marriage of contemporary Western culture with the traditional Japanese sensibility makes this story collection by young Japanese writers a worthwhile successor to a distinguished literary past.” –Kirkus Reviews…

The Ubu Plays

by Alfred Jarry

“One of the epock-making scandals of Western theater. . . . Ubu’s appetite is for power. He represents the apocalyptic slob, the roaring, grasping “man of the people” who chomps…

The Theater and Its Double

by Antonin Artaud

“The course of all recent serious theater in Western Europe and the Americas can be said to divide into two periods–before Artaud and after Artaud. No one who works in…