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A World War One love story about the arrival of a soldier at the home of an aviator friend, who happens to be a dandy and avant-garde composer. The novel was inspired by two images, Goya's engraving La Mala Noche and Burne-Jone's painting King Cophetua and the Beggar Girl.
Fiction. These astonishing stories, which range in setting from Palm Beach to Paris to poet Robert Lowell's New York City hotel room, trace the designs and delusions of people at turning points and souls in turmoil. Robert Boyers is Tisch Professor of Arts and Letters at Skidmore College and editor of Salmagundi. He is the author of seven books, including Atrocity and Amnesia: The Political Novel Since 1945. He also won the Cooper Prize for the best short story of the year, 2003. Recent stories have appeared in The Yale Review, Harvard Review, Parnassus, and Michigan Quarterly Review.
The persistence of a spirit of wonder in the midst of war, tragedy, chaos, and death.
At stately novel about an English brother and sister who grow up in a holiday colony in France. The colony depicted in the auto-biographical novel is in fact Le Touquet Paris-Plage, which was founded by the author's grandfather.
Heartbreaking and hilarious portraits of Alice B. Toklas, Marguerite Young, Vassar Miller and other "noble" women.
Creaturely reads like an urban Thoreau. Devin Johnston seeks intersections between culture and nature, humans and animals.
The misadventures of a 16 year old aspiring English aesthete who arrives in Normandy.
A detective story, a black comedy, a tragedy, Lord of Dark Places, thirty-five years out of print, is a dissertation on the histories and stereotypes that conspire to man and to unman Black Americans by a Faulkner Award-winning writer."Bennett is a New York Genet."-New Statesman
A witty, poignant account of Eton, early adolescence, awakining to the spell of Wagner.
A Parisian clerk seeks spiritual contentment in this small, dark, mordantly comic masterpiece of everyday pessimism.
A bilingual (English and French) poetry anthology with works by 38 American poets in honor of Whitman's Leaves of Grass for its 150th anniversary. The poets include John Ashbery, Bill Berkson, Charles Bernstein, Robert Creeley, Mark Ford, Peter Gizzi, Jorie Graham, David Trinidad, and Anne Waldman.
With an introduction by Richard Howard, these elegant short stories describe imaginary nineteenth-century middle European royalty with urbane humor, loving characterizations, and Twilight Zone twists.
A seemingly off-the-cuff songbook of late poems dealing with aging, memory, belief and illusion.
"Like Tosca, Charles Henri Ford has lived for art and love...a masterpiece."Edmund White
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