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The Devil of Nanking
by Mo Hayder“A thriller of rare art and gripping excitement . . . [Hayder’s] experiences add to her book’s unusually rich atmosphere. . . . Eventually, the story becomes a beautifully paced,…
Better the Blood
by Michael BennettAn absorbing, clever debut thriller that speaks to the longstanding injustices faced by New Zealand’s indigenous peoples, by an acclaimed Māori screenwriter and director
Closets
by Patricia CoenA necessity for any person who recognizes that organization is one of the keys to better living.
The Bullet Trick
by Louise Welsh“Delivers both the erotic tingle and the frisson of revulsion some of us feel when exploring a decadent subculture. . . . One of the most exciting new writers in…
The Blue Room
by David Hare“[Hare’s] play slides up on one insidiously–always suggesting more than they first suggest, planting depth charges in the mind, subtly laying a minefield in the self-confidence of one’s first impressions.”…
Crawling at Night
by Nani Power“[Power’s] starkly realistic characters and terse, lyrical prose herald her as an exciting new voice. . . . Ito is a Japanese sushi chef, recently arrived in New York City,…
The Best Bad Dream
by Robert WardFrom award-winning novelist Robert Ward, a story about an FBI agent who falls in love with a glamorous snitch who leads him straight into trouble.
Day of Reckoning
by John Katzenbach“A superb exercise in suspense. . . . Katzenbach leavens [the] cat-and-mouse formula with wry social comment and other staples of literary fiction, generally in short supply in thrillers.” —New…
Allan Stein
by Matthew Stadler“Allan Stein has the qualities of the sublime. Not in the diluted modern sense of the word, but in its older combination of beauty and menace, fascination and dread ….
Carnival
by Robert AntoniFrom a Commonwealth Writers Prize–winner for Best First Book comes a stunning new novel that lays bare themes of race and sexuality in a parodic recasting of Hemingway’s The Sun…