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The Mezzanine
Nicholson Baker
Funny, engrossing, it reads like no other book I know.
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We Ride Upon Sticks: A Novel
Quan Barry
Rick Magee won Byrd’s Books Battle IV on October 21, 2020, enchanting the audience with his take on Quan Barry’s novel We Ride Upon Sticks. It’s a coming-of-age story set against the background of the 1980s about the Danvers, Massachusetts High School girls’ field hockey team and the quest to redeem...show more
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Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil
John Berendt
When Esquire columnist John Berendt began dividing his time between Manhattan and Savannah in the early 1980s, it wasn’t with the idea of writing a book, much less breaking publishing records or singlehandedly reinvigorating the tourist industry of the southern city. Savannah was simply an interesti...show more
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Wuthering Heights
Emily Brontë
In its intense drama and disregard for orthodox morality, Wuthering Heights continues to surprise and challenge us today. To attempt to chart the web of relationships of blood, marriage, social strata, economic dependence, love, envy, hatred, and revenge that bind Catherine and Heathcliff to the boo...show more
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The Story of Babar
Jean de Brunhoff
Some denizens of children’s literature are so entrenched in our collective imagination, and Babar the elephant is certainly one, that they seem natural formations in the landscape of our fancy—timeless, enduring presences the world has always known. Not so, of course; even Babar was invented, making...show more
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A Walk in the Woods
Bill Bryson
Waddling slothfully through middle age, popular travel writer Bill Bryson decided one day that he could do with a walk in the woods—a lengthy walk, in fact: 2,100 rugged miles along the celebrated Appalachian Trail (AT), the longest continuous footpath in the world. Did Bryson dare? Well, not only d...show more
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Naked Lunch
William S. Burroughs
During his early career, Burroughs was characterized as a failed sci-fi writer but he is true futurist, working easily at the same level of Toffler, McLuhan or Fuller, but with a much sharper prose style. To paraphrase Prof. John Tytell, Burroughs may have actually possessed some highly adapted ante...show more
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In Cold Blood
Truman Capote
When Herbert William Clutter and his family were bound, gagged, and murdered on the night of November 15, 1959, there was little evidence of who’d done it, or why. The story of their gruesome end made the New York Times, where it was read by literary light Truman Capote, who determined almost immedi...show more
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