Christopher Brown, "Rule of Capture" (Harper Vo...
A crash course in the law as well as a darkly humorous thriller, Christopher Brown’s "Rule of Capture" should make you think hard about the importance of law and its implications for citizens...
65 min
1352
K Chess, "Famous Men Who Never Lived" (Tin Hous...
"Famous Men Who Never Lived" is set in two Brooklyns. In one, people ride in trams; in the other, they take subways. In one, the swastika is a symbol of luck; in the other, it signifies hate.,,
24 min
1353
Nora Gold, "The Dead Man" (Inanna Publications,...
"The Dead Man" a beautiful tale of love, loss, family, and the music of the world around us...
30 min
1354
Dan Burns, "Grace: Stories and a Novella" (Chic...
In Dan Burns’ latest book unforgettable characters encounter gorgeous landscapes, nasty betrayals, shocking technology, a heartless future, and a decaying city neighborhood...
33 min
1355
Mary Fleming, "The Art of Regret" (She Writes P...
Mary Fleming moved to Paris in 1981, as a freelance journalist and consultant...
24 min
1356
Olga Zilberbourg, "Like Water and Other Stories...
To this generation that includes writers as disparate as Gary Shteyngart and Irina Reyn comes Olga Zilberbourg...
54 min
1357
Sarah Pinsker, "A Song for a New Day" (Berkley,...
Pinsker explores how society changes following two plausible disasters: a surge in terrorism and a deadly epidemic...
26 min
1358
Elizabeth Chiles Shelburne, "Holding Onto Nothi...
Lucy Kilgore has her bags packed for her escape from her rural Tennessee upbringing...
23 min
1359
Emily Skaja, "Brute" (Graywolf Press, 2019)
"Brute" is a stunning collection of poetry that navigates the dark corridors of trauma found at the end of an abusive relationship...
47 min
1360
Craig DiLouie, "Our War" (Orbit, 2019)
DiLouie's "Our War" is about a second U.S. civil war that starts after the president is impeached and convicted but refuses to step down—feels as if it might be only weeks away...
42 min
1361
Steven Moore, "The Longer We Were There: A Memo...
The reality of war is much more nuanced than the typical narratives might have you believe...
45 min
1362
Kathryn Conrad on University Press Publishing
What do university presses do, and how do they do it?
37 min
1363
Johanna Stoberock, "Pigs" (Red Hen Press, 2019)
Stoberock has written a lyrical fable about an island that receives all the world’s garbage...
27 min
1364
Tamara J. Madison, "Threed, This Road Not Damas...
Madison seamlessly bridges the gap between past and present while remaining grounded in the here and now...
35 min
1365
Charles Todd, "A Cruel Deception" (William Morr...
Writing novels—never mind entire series—takes determination, persistence, imagination, and craft...
43 min
1366
H. G. Parry, "The Unlikely Escape of Uriah Heep...
While all fiction writers can pull characters from their imaginations and commit them to the page, most readers can’t do what Charley Sutherland can: pull characters from the page and commit them to the real world...
38 min
1367
Emily Roberson, "Lifestyles of Gods and Monster...
In this modern version of the myth of Theseus and Ariadne, Ariadne is a complacent Daddy‘s girl when we meet her...
27 min
1368
Talia Carner, "The Third Daughter" (William Mor...
"The Third Daughter" is an essential and compelling read, not least because although set in the late nineteenth century its story is as contemporary as yesterday’s headlines...
36 min
1369
Julie Justicz, "Degrees of Difficulty" (Fomite ...
Ben Novotny was born with a rare chromosomal abnormality that caused profound mental retardation and seizures...
22 min
1370
Jason Bayani, "Locus" (Omnidawn Publishing, 2019)
"Poetry gave me back a way to find my culture, my history,” says Jason Bayani...
40 min
1371
Oren Harman, "Evolutions: Fifteen Myths That Ex...
Harman takes scientific facts, as we know them today, and weaves them into narratives that have the tone, grace and drama of myth...
63 min
1372
Wiley Cash, "The Last Ballad" (William Morrow, ...
Cash explores the complexities of southern class, race, and gender relations against the backdrop of the 1929 Loray Mill strike...
30 min
1373
Alan Bradley, "The Flavia de Luce Mystery Serie...
Flavia de Luce, who lives in an enormous manor house in England, with her widowed father and two sisters. It’s 1950, and England is still rebuilding itself after WWII...
30 min
1374
John Birmingham, "The Cruel Stars" (Del Rey, 2019)
“I'm a huge fan of the [space opera] genre, but it took me a while to get the confidence to write my own,” Birmingham says.
37 min
1375
K. C. Maher, "The Best of Crimes" (RedDoor Publ...
A man turns himself into the police for kidnapping an underage girl...