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Two Guys from Verona
by James Kaplan“Kaplan’s novel is a view of suburban life as David Lynch might imagine it: as banal as a mini-mall, yet seething with anxiety, eroticism and violence. Novels don’t come any…
Transforming Leadership
by James MacGregor Burns“Harvesting vignettes from American and world history and reading them in light of new sociological and psychological research, [Burns’] latest book aims to put “transforming leadership” at the core of…
Too Much Magic
by James Howard Kunstler“James Howard Kunstler’s new much-publicized critique of humanity, Too Much Magic, predicts peak oil, the death of the automobile, and the fall of the global economy as we know it.”…
The Thief’s Journal
by Jean Genet“One of the strongest and most vital accounts of a life ever set down on paper. . . . Genet has dramatized the story of his own life with a…
Sunset Over Chocolate Mountains
by Susan Elderkin“Elderkin has crafted a complex, heartbreaking tale, entwining the lives of quirky characters in an improbable but compelling narrative illustrating the agonizing potential of love to cause more pain than…
Stet
by Diana Athill‘diana Athill has a delightful way with the English language–crisp, scrupulously honest, precise and without a micron of self-indulgence. . . . Luckily for the reader, all her life Athill…
Stargazing
by Peter Hill“It’s 1973, Watergate and Vietnam, the Grateful Dead. What are you going to be when you grow up? asks a friend. A lighthouse keeper, says our 20-year old. . ….
A Spell of Winter
by Helen Dunmore“[Dunmore] beautifully captures paranoia, how it feels to wonder if people smell guilt on your skin and–most powerfully–how you can rationalize an act until you convince yourself it never even…
A Sea of Troubles
by Donna Leon“Brunetti’s humane police work is disarming, and his ambles through the city are a delight.” —The New York Times Book Review…
The Screens
by Jean Genet“Only a true poet, a man possessed of verbally imagined artistry, could write such a play as The Screens. . . . [It] reveals a fabulous theatrical imagination, a joy…