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Reading in Honor of World Refugee Day

…the adopted homeland and the country of birth. From a young Vietnamese refugee who suffers profound culture shock when he comes to live with two gay men in San Francisco,…

Father’s Day Reads: The Revolutionary

…of a man of two minds, someone whose political beliefs clash with his individual loyalties. In dialogue with but diametrically opposed to the narratives of the Vietnam War that have…

Charles Kaiser, author of 1968 in America, on the return of Bob Dylan

…important thing that happened to you that year came before the Tet Offensive in South Vietnam (January 30), or Lyndon Johnson’s abdication (March 31), or Martin Luther King’s assassination (April…

Books to Read During Native American Heritage Month

…journey to adulthood. Although the backdrop of much of Young Bear’s novel may be familiar—the conflicts over race, drugs, Vietnam and others that gripped America in the fifties, sixties, and…

The Beholder’s Eye

by Walt Harrington

“Aims to dispel the old journalistic clich”: that a journalist writing about him/herself is always ‘self-indulgent and, quite likely, narcissistic.” He couldn’t have put together a better lineup of writers…

The Unknowns

by Patrick K. O'Donnell

The award-winning author of Washington’s Immortals offers a searing narrative that takes readers into the heart of combat in the Great War….

Word Virus

by William S. Burroughs

“Word Virus: The Williams S. Burroughs Reader finally brings the author’s actual writing back to the forefront. In their selections, editors James Grauerholz and Ira Silverberg highlight the many faces…

Wonderland

by Michael Bamberger

“Bamberger spends a year learning the individual stories that make up a senior class, weaving them together for a composite portrait that, we hope, will give us a clear vision…

The Voyeur’s Motel

by Gay Talese

From Gay Talese, a remarkable new work of reportage more than thirty years in the making.

Truth and Bright Water

by Thomas King

“Marvelous . . . This subtle and deceptively simple tale is an elegiac and beautiful tragicomedy about a single summer, two towns, and three Indian kids. . . . Beneath…