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Category:
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Series:
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| Title | Author | Description | |
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The Mangan Inheritance
Mangan Inheritance
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Brian Moore
Moore
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After his movie-star wife dispenses with him, Jamey Mangan decamps to Ireland in search of his roots. After all, he bears an uncanny resemblance to the only known photograph of the famous Irish poète maudit James Clarence Mangan. Filled with pathos and humor, The Mangan Inheritance is a cautionary tale for those seeking their presents in their pasts.
Contributors: Christopher Ricks |
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Masscult and Midcult: Essays Against the American Grain
Masscult and Midcult
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Dwight Macdonald
Macdonald
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Essayist and provocateur Dwight Macdonald was not afraid to slay sacred cows, and he did so with glee. In this newly gathered collection, Macdonald takes on Ernest Hemingway, James Agee, Tom Wolfe, Webster’s Dictionary, the Revised Standard Version of the Bible, and, most famously, the possibly pernicious ascendancy of popular culture.
Contributors: John Summers , Louis Menand |
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The Mountain Lion
Mountain Lion
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Jean Stafford
Stafford
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“The Mountain Lion remains a brilliant achievement, an exploration of adolescence to set beside Carson McCullers’s masterwork The Member of the Wedding.” —Joyce Carol Oates
Contributors: Kathryn Davis |
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The New York Stories of Elizabeth Hardwick
New York Stories of Elizabeth Hardwick
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Elizabeth Hardwick
Hardwick
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Celebrated stories of living, loving, and surviving in New York's bohemian and literary circles. This collection is the first to gather the short fiction of Elizabeth Hardwick, one of the leading figures of twentieth-century American letters.
Contributors: Darryl Pinckney |
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Nightmare Alley
Nightmare Alley
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William Lindsay Gresham
Gresham
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Nightmare Alley begins with an extraordinary description of a freak-show geek— the object of the voyeuristic crowd's gleeful disgust—going about his work at a county fair. Young Stan Carlisle is working as a carny, and he wonders how a man could fall so low. There's no way that anything like that will ever happen to him.
Contributors: Nick Tosches |
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The Old Devils
Old Devils
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Kingsley Amis
Amis
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Winner of the 1986 Booker Prize, and considered by his son Martin to be Kingsley Amis’s greatest achievement, The Old Devils is delightful proof that neither Amis nor his characters mellowed in old age. In fact, a placid life is just the thing that Amis denies his old devils, whose routines of nattering, complaining, and drinking, are thrown into chaos when an old friend and rival (now a successful writer) returns to town with a new and entrancing wife.
Contributors: John Banville |
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The Outward Room
Outward Room
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Millen Brand
Brand
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The Outward Room was a sensation when first published in 1937. It is the story of a young
womans path from suffering to deep fulfillment, set in Depression-era New York City. One
of those firmly painted, exquisite miniatures of life...that contrive to be unsparing and honest,
and at the same time refreshing and lovely. —Theodore Dreiser
Contributors: Peter Cameron |
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Pitch Dark
Pitch Dark
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Renata Adler
Adler
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“What’s new. What else. What next. What’s happened here.” Pitch Dark, Renata Adler’s follow-up to her prize-winning novel Speedboat, is a book of questions, questions that bedevil Kate Ennis as she considers her relationship with her married lover. “A moving, infuriating, tantalizing book.”—The Boston Globe
Contributors: Muriel Spark |
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The Pumpkin Eater
Pumpkin Eater
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Penelope Mortimer
Mortimer
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An exquisitely surreal black comedy about marriage, motherhood, and the madness of modern life. "(Mortimer) is the family historian of the smart, go ahead, two-car household which has a double load of private misery packed in each boot." —Robert Pitman, Sunday Express
Contributors: Daphne Merkin |
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Red Shift
Red Shift
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Alan Garner
Garner
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Red Shift is a passionate fever-dream of a novel. It time-slips through English history and circles around the troubled mind of Tom, a love-struck teenager in tense rebellion against the strictures of his lower middle-class upbringing. “A bitter, complex, brilliant book.” —Ursula K. Le Guin |












