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1959

by Thulani Davis

“Willie Tarrant recalls both Scout in Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird and Nel in Toni Morrison’s Sula. . . . A captivating heroine. . . . 1959 is not…

Valley of the Dolls

by Jacqueline Susann

“Decades ahead of its time . . . Mesmerizing . . . The equation of emotional dependencies with drug addiction in one comprehensive personality disorder is, if anything, more chic…

The House at Belle Fontaine

by Lily Tuck

“Evocative stories of beautiful language and masterful economy . . . Tuck’s unflinching eye to detail and faithful ear for dialogue bring to life the brutal, the tragic, and the…

The Lion Sleeps Tonight

by Rian Malan

A long-awaited collection of essays and journalism from one of South Africa’s best-regarded and most influential commentators, which illuminates the darker and lighter sides of the country’s last twenty years….

Expats

by Christopher Dickey

“In this engaging book, laced with humor, pathos and sensitivity, Mr. Dickey unveils this new Arabia, shaped by the sometimes creative, always skeptical tension between the Arab and the expatriate.”…

The Last Narco

by Malcolm Beith

“The Last Narco gracefully captures the heroic struggle of those who dare to stand up to the cartels, and the ways those cartels have tragically corrupted every aspect of Mexican…

Random Acts of Senseless Violence

by Jack Womack

“Fascinating and well written . . . wonderfully inventive. . . . Mr. Womack’s New York has a constant punk-rocker violence, which unwinds with a deadpan humor.” –The New York…

Age and Guile Beat Youth, Innocence, and a Bad Haircut

by P. J. O'Rourke

“From the fictionalized accounts of his career as a hard-drinking hippie to the Benchley-in-the-age-of-macho lampoon of fly fishing, Mr. o’Rourke shows an incorrigible comic gift and an eye for detail…

The Old Turk’s Load

by Gregory Gibson

“Gibson’s elliptical, ever-evolving plot seems a marriage of Raymond Chandler complexity and Donald E. Westlake comic haplessness, but he imbues his characters with a . . . desperate humanity ….

The Traveler

by John Katzenbach

“A powerful, obsessive novel of murder and madness.” —The New York Times…