Counterpoint - Publishers Group West
Transcription
Counterpoint - Publishers Group West
COUNTERPOINT SOFT SKULL SPRING 2013 COUNTERPOINT Orkney “Sackville reminds us of the pleasure in being carried to far‑off worlds by words alone.” —The New York Times Book Review Amy Sackville Following her wonderful debut, The Still Point, Sackville returns with a strangely beautiful short novel about love and sex and obsession. A literature professor marries his prize student, a woman forty years his junior, and at her request he takes her to the sea for their honeymoon. He is embarked on his life’s work, a book about enchantment narratives in literature, most all of them involving strange girls and women, but soon finds himself distracted by his own enchantment for his new white-haired young wife. They travel to the Orkney Islands, the ancient Mesolithic and Neolithic site north of the Scottish coast, known as “the Seal Islands,” a barren place of extraordinary beauty. And as the days of their honeymoon pass, his desire and his constant, yearning contemplation become his normality. His mysterious bride becomes his entire universe. He is consumed. Praise for The Still Point “Many novels explore the sliding planes, the archaeology of past, present and future and the still points where the fabric of time is rent and characters slip through. This is a lot to juggle, especially in a debut novel, but Amy Sackville pulls it off—thrillingly, seductively, dreamily. Not only do all the moving parts hold together, but a new fictional voice emerges here as well; not harsh, brash and shiny, not overly self-conscious and sentimental—somewhere between the calm beauty we expect from novels that invoke Victorian England and the raw edges of modern life.” —Los Angeles Times 978-1-61902-119-8 CLOTH 5.5" × 8.25" 224 pages Marketing • Book review coverage targeting The New York Times, Harper’s, The New York Review of Books, and other important reviewers of literary fiction • Online marketing campaign targeting literary blogs and websites • Book club outreach • Marketing efforts in conjunction with Granta’s February 2013 publication Of Note • The Still Point was long-listed for the 2010 Orange Prize, and was the winner of the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize • It was also selected as one of the Financial Times’ Books of the Year and one of The Times Literary Supplement Books of the Year for 2010 © Peter Schiazza Yesterday morning, at home, I woke beside her for the first time. Well, that is not quite true; last night I slept beside her for the first time, but by dawn I had woken beside her a dozen times, a hundred times, sometimes from a sleep so shallow I couldn’t call it waking. Again and again I turned to find another body in my bed, an unfamiliar warmth alongside my own, and wondered where I was and what I had done, before remembering and sinking again into a grateful doze—only to wake again moments later. Each time, as the brown abstraction of my surroundings resolved into the ordinary shapes of my own bedroom, there was still that body beside me, a living residue of an impossibly optimistic dream. All night, the rise and fall of her form, the snuffle and snore. $25.00 fiction Territory: US april Amy Sackville was born in 1981. She studied English and Theatre Studies at Leeds, and went on to an MPhil in English at Exeter College, Oxford, and an MA in Creative & Life Writing at Goldsmiths. She teaches creative writing at the University of Kent. 2 Excerpt from Orkney ALSO AVAILABLE THE STILL POINT Trade Paper • $15.95 978-1-58243-800-9 “A quiet but significant debut about identity and family.” —Financial Times “Amy Sackville’s The Still Point, a story of turn-of-the-century arctic pioneering and contemporary emotional frozen states, has an Eliotic calm that seems almost uncanny in a debut writer, and a narrative voice that’s subtle and original.” —The Times Literary Supplement 3 The Wrong Dog Dream A True Romance Think you found your perfect life? Think again . . . Jane Vandenburgh The author calls this “a true romance,” saying it’s the part of her personal history she, being superstitious, was almost afraid to write. She’d grown up accustomed to bad luck, but had—by accident or miracle—survived her own circumstances: being orphaned, her own misspent youth, the chaos of a broken marriage. She’d more than survived, she’d even triumphed and had awakened into a kind of charmed splendor to find herself living in a white marble city with storybook castles, knowing famous people, being invited to the White House to listen to her husband discuss Yeats with the president of the United States, as Bill Clinton drinks Diet Coke from the can. And into this fabled chapter of the writer’s life comes the perfect dog, an English springer spaniel named Whistler who arrives not only as the family pet, but as her private symbol of triumph over all that age-old sadness. She wants to ignore it but can’t help but see that their perfect pup is something of a neurotic mess, snarling at manhole covers, barking at children, growling at people in wheelchairs. The writer herself is not seemingly done with the anxieties born of all that early trauma and loss, and she begins to worry obsessively about losing this difficult dog, the one they so love. Wrrrrnnnggdgggg! she begins to dream Wrrrrrnnnnng dgggg! Marketing • National print campaign focusing on top dailies, women’s magazines, and literary outlets • Radio campaign targeting women’s-interest shows at NPR and top 10 markets • Online campaign featuring blogs, posts, and interviews with relevant websites • Events in the San Francisco Bay Area • Promotion through the author’s website: www.janevandenburgh.com Praise for A Pocket History of Sex in the Twentieth Century “Intense, controlled, a memoir-as-feverdream.” —Dwight Garner, The New York Times “It’s a rare pleasure to be in the hands of a memoirist both old enough and good enough to wring this kind of coherence from life’s chaos.” —Alison Bechdel, The New York Times Book Review “Like a string of Chinese firecrackers.” —The Washington Post Praise for Jane Vandenburgh’s other books “Rarely has a first novel so beautifully communicated the intelligence and despair of the insane as Vandenburgh’s exquisite Failure to Zigzag.” —San Francisco Chronicle “The Physics of Sunset admirably grapples with the idea that doomed passion can have a place in our lives . . . A curious mix of breathtaking erotic defiance and unabashed romantic existentialism—much like adultery itself.” —New York Newsday “Jane Vandenburgh’s ability to clarify the wheres and hows of writing fiction, her gentle instructions on where to begin, how to listen as the story and its characters reveal themselves to us, how to soar as a novelist while keeping things simple and real, almost make me want to write another novel.” —Anne Lamott on Architecture of the Novel 978-1-61902-120-4 CLOTH 6" × 9" 384 pages $26.00 Memoir Territory: WE april Jane Vandenburgh is the award-winning author of two novels, Failure to Zigzag and The Physics of Sunset, as well as Architecture of the Novel: A Writer’s Handbook and The Pocket History of Sex in the Twentieth Century: A Memoir. She has taught writing and literature at UC Davis, the George Washington University, and, most recently, at Saint Mary’s College in Moraga, California. A native of Berkeley, she has returned to live with her family in the West, and with Wayne Thiebaud, her new dog. 4 © Madeleine Tilin Photography Also Available ARCHITECTURE OF THE NOVEL: A WRITER’S HANDBOOK Trade Paper • $15.95 978-1-58243-597-8 A POCKET HISTORY OF SEX IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY: A MEMOIR Trade Paper • $15.95 978-1-58243-559-6 5 Spiritual American Trash Prisoner of Zion Portraits from the Margins of Art & Faith Mormons, Muslims, and Other Misadventures Greg Bottoms Illustrations by W. David Powell TRADE PAPER original Scott carrier Sometimes madness encapsulates the most beguiling beauty Out of a desire for a life without fear, Carrier challenges us to reconsider terrorism and retaliation In Spiritual American Trash, Greg Bottoms goes beyond the examination of eight “outsider artists” and inhabits the spirit of their work and stories in engaging vignettes. From the janitor who created a holy throne room out of scraps in a garage, to the lonely wartime mother who filled her home with driftwood replicas of Bible scenes, Bottoms illustrates the peculiar grace in madness. Using facts as scaffolding he constructs intimate narratives around the artists, painting their poor and difficult circumstances on the outskirts of American society and demonstrating their struggles’ influence on their largely undiscovered art. Both mournful and celebratory, these profiles embrace eight compulsive creators with empathy and visceral sensory details. Each sentence reads with the cadence of a preacher who engages the art of the spirit and passion that often strays into obsession. Raised in the working-class South as a devout Christian with a deeply troubled brother, Bottoms understands how these outsiders “made art for a higher power and for themselves.” Soon after the World Trade Center towers fell on 9/11, it became clear the United States would invade Afghanistan. Writer and “This American Life” radio producer Scott Carrier decided to go there too. He wanted to see for himself: Who are these fanatics, the fundamentalists, the Taliban, and the like? What do they want? In his new book, Prisoner of Zion, Carrier writes about his adventures, but also about the bigger problem. Having grown up among Mormons in Salt Lake City, he argues it will never work to attack true believers head-on. The faithful thrive on persecution. Somehow, he thinks, we need to find a way—inside ourselves—to rise above fear and anger. Praise for The Colorful Apocalypse Marketing • National print campaign targeting top art and religion outlets • National radio campaign targeting shows at NPR • Online campaign featuring blogs, interviews, and podcasts Of Note “Driven by painful memories of a schizophrenic brother who had visions and turned to Christian fundamentalist thinking, Bottoms sought out religious outsider artists, hoping to discover whether artistic expression helps relieve the suffering of visionaries who hover between madness and ecstasy . . . His poignant book, imbued with troubling thoughts of his brother’s illness and his own uneasiness about his motives in seeking out marginalized artists, ends on a positive note: the creative process does indeed have life-affirming powers.” —Publishers Weekly 978-1-61902-059-7 trade paper original 5.5" × 8.25" 208 pages $15.95 art essays Territory: WE april An essayist, memoirist, critic, and story writer, Greg Bottoms is the author of The Colorful Apocalypse and Fight Scenes. He teaches creative writing at the University of Vermont, and lives in Shelburne, VT. 6 © Amy Miller Sunday morning, 1962, a family restaurant. A husband, wife, and two young sons are eating lunch after attending church. The mother is dressed like Jackie Kennedy—white pillbox hat, long white gloves. The father wears a black suit like Joe Friday on Dragnet. The boys have black suits like their father’s, and crew cuts, freckles, and glasses that are taped together and hang sideways on their noses. The boys are uncomfortable in their Sunday clothes. The father is uncomfortable with his family. The mother asks her sons, “Well, what did you learn from the sermon this morning?” “The minister was saying God listens to our prayers,” says the younger son, age five, “so I was praying, asking God to move the light hanging from the ceiling, as a sign. Nothing happened.” “I don’t believe in God,” says the older son, age six. The mother is shocked. “Don’t say that. There most certainly is a God.” “It’s a lie,” the boy says. “There is no God.” He’s angry. • Swallowing the Past was long-listed for the Frank O’Connor Story Prize • Bottoms has contributed to Bookforum, Killing the Buddha, Salon, and Oxford American Excerpt from Prisoner of Zion 978-1-61902-121-1 trade paper original 5.5" × 8.25" 256 pages $16.95 literary essays Territory: WE april TRADE PAPER original Marketing • National print review campaign focusing on top 20 dailies and magazines • Radio campaign targeting shows at NPR and top 10 markets • Online campaign featuring blogs, posts, podcasts, and interviews with political and current affairs outlets • Promotion through the author’s website: www.prisonerofzion.com Of Note • Carrier’s radio stories have been broadcast by NPR’s “All Things Considered” and “Day to Day,” APM’s “The Story,” “Savvy Traveler,” and “Hearing Voices from NPR,” and PRI’s “This American Life.” Scott Carrier is a writer, photographer, and radio producer. He was born, raised and still lives in Salt Lake City, Utah. His print articles and photos have appeared in Harper’s, Esquire, GQ, Rolling Stone, and Mother Jones. Carrier’s radio stories have been broadcast by NPR’s “All Things Considered” and “Day to Day,” APM’s “The Story,” “Savvy Traveler,” and “Hearing Voices from NPR,” and PRI’s “This American Life.” He’s also the author of Running After Antelope. Photo courtesy of the author 7 Cold Mountain Poems I Told You So: Gore Vidal Talks Politics Twenty-Four Poems by Han-Shan Interviews with Jon Wiener Translated by Gary snyder Gore vidal with jon wiener A beautiful new edition of Snyder’s beloved poetry Marketing • National print review campaign focusing on top 20 dailies and magazines as well as top literary journals • National radio campaign targeting literary shows on NPR and top 10 markets • Online campaign and promotion Of Note • Snyder was awarded The Wallace Stevens Award for lifetime achievement from The Academy of American Poets In 1953, Gary Snyder returned to the Bay Area and, at age 23, enrolled in graduate school at the University of California, Berkeley, to study Asian languages and culture. He intensified his study of Chinese and Japanese, and taking up the challenge of one of his professors, Chen Shih-hsiang, he began to work on translating a largely unknown poet by the name of Han Shan, a writer with whom the professor thought Snyder might feel a special affinity. The results were magical. As Patrick Murphy noted, “These poems are something more than translations precisely because Snyder renders them as a melding of Han Shan’s Chinese Ch’an Buddhist mountain spirit trickster mentality and Snyder’s own mountain wilderness meditation and labor activities.” The suite of 24 poems was published in the 1958 issue of The Evergreen Review, and the career of one of America’s greatest poets was launched. In 1972, Press-22 issued a beautiful edition of these poems written out by hand in italic by Michael McPherson. We are doing a new augments edition based on the old, with a new design, a preface by Lu Ch’iu-yin, and an afterword by Mr. Snyder where he discusses how he came to this work and what it meant to his development as a writer and Buddhist. On May 11, 2012, for the Stronach Memorial Lecture at The University of California, more than fifty years after his days there as a student, Snyder offered a public lecture reflecting on Chinese poetry, Han Shan, and his continuing work as a poet and translator. This remarkable occasion was recorded and we are including a CD of it in our edition, making this the most definitive edition of Cold Mountain Poems ever published. “The four most beautiful words in our common language: ‘I told you so.’” “I exist to say, ‘No, that isn’t the way it is,’ or ‘What you believe to be true is not true for the following reasons.’ I am a master of the obvious. I mean, if there’s a hole in the road, I will, viciously, outrageously, say there’s a hole in the road and if you don’t fill it in you’ll break the axle of your car. One is not loved for being helpful.” Gore Vidal, one of America’s foremost essayists, screenwriters, and novelists, died July 31, 2012. He was, in addition, a terrific conversationalist. Dick Cavett once described him as “the best talker since Oscar Wilde.” And Vidal was never more eloquent, or caustic, than when let loose on his favorite topic: the history and politics of the United States. This book is made up from four interviews conducted with his long-time interlocutor, the writer and radio host Jon Wiener, in which Vidal grapples with matters evidently close to his heart: the history of the American Empire, the rise of the National Security State, and his own life in politics, both as a commentator and candidate. The interviews cover a twenty-year span, from 1988 to 2008, when Vidal was at the height of his powers. His extraordinary facility for developing an argument, tracing connections between past and present, and drawing on an encyclopedic knowledge of America’s place in the world, are all on full display. And, of course, it being Gore Vidal, an ample sprinkling of gloriously acerbic oneliners is also provided. TRADE PAPER original Marketing • National print review campaign focusing on top 20 dailies and magazines and political outlets • Radio campaign targeting NPR and top 10 markets for the interviewer Jon Wiener to appear • Online campaign targeting political outlets Of note • These are never-before-printed interviews 978-1-61902-168-6 cloth with CD 8" × 8" 120 pages $25.00 poetry Territory: w april Gary Snyder was born in San Francisco on May 8, 1930. He won the Pulitzer Prize in 1975 and was elected to The American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters in 1987. In addition to the Bollingen Prize and the Ruth Lily Award, he won The Wallace Stevens Prize from the American Academy of Poetry in 2012. He lives in the foothills of the Sierra on a homestead he established there more than forty years ago. 8 © Photo courtesy of Simeon Films 978-1-61902-174-7 trade paper original 5" × 7" 128 pages $13.95 Political science/Essays territory: WE April Gore Vidal was the author of numerous novels, short stories, plays, screenplays, and essays. A winner of the National Book Award, he was also a tireless political activist and, running as Democratic candidate for Congress in upstate New York, received more votes for that district than any Democrat in a half-century. Jon Wiener is a contributing editor to The Nation and a professor of history at the University of California at Irvine. He is the author of How We Forgot the Cold War: A Historical Journey Across America, Gimme Some Truth: The John Lennon FBI Files, and Professors, Politics and Pop, and the editor (with Tom Hayden) of Conspiracy in the Streets. 9 The Last Pilgrimage My Mother’s Life and Our Journey to Saying Goodbye A heartbreaking look at the former First Lady of Los Angeles and her family’s brave fight against cancer Linda Daly Linda Daly had a seemingly charmed life: Her mother Nancy was married to the head of Warner Bros., and her parents were one of the most prominent couples in Los Angeles. Even their divorce couldn’t test the bond between mother and daughter, and their family grew: Her mother married Dick Riordan, mayor of L.A.; her father married songwriter Carole Bayer Sager. The extended family used their combined resources to help a number of cultural and philanthropic concerns across the country until they encountered the one thing they could not overcome: Nancy’s diagnosis of stage four pancreatic cancer. So mother and daughter teamed up to begin a search for a miracle cure—a roller-coaster ride through the rigors of Western medicine, the surgeries and chemotherapies, and the untested boundaries of alternative medicine. All along Linda stayed by her mother’s side, facing the fear of the unknown, as she struggled with both her mother’s diagnosis and her own lifelong issues with faith and religion. Out of choices and almost out of time, Linda and her mother put their rocky faith in one last pilgrimage: a visit to a Brazilian faith healer, John of God, during his residence in upstate New York. Fleeing the dubious practices of the faith healer, and with Nancy’s time quickly running out, Linda and her siblings embarked on a final road trip home, in a rented, unruly RV, to bring Nancy back to her beloved City of Angels. What Linda learned on their final pilgrimage together would change her forever and speaks to the issues faced by many adult sons and daughters today: how to help those who gave you life face the end of their own. Ultimately, The Last Pilgrimage is Linda’s love letter to her mother, proof that the end of life can offer a peaceful and comforting farewell. 978-1-61902-117-4 cloTH 6" × 9" 288 pages Marketing • National print campaign focusing on top 20 dailies and magazines • National media campaign focusing on morning and afternoon talk shows • Radio campaign targeting NPR and top 10 markets • Online campaign featuring blogs, posts, podcasts, and interviews with women’s outlets • Author events in Los Angeles Of Note • This will be excerpted on The Huffington Post Praise for The Last Pilgrimage “This is a story of love and strength, the importance of family and friends, and mostly about a woman who refused to see the bottle as half empty even when it was down to its last ounces.” —Carole Bayer Sager • Daly has contributed to the Los Angeles Times Magazine Excerpt from The Last Pilgrimage Even though Western medical intervention had given her much more time than had originally been thought, my goal-oriented mom decided to look elsewhere. For her, there was another world of available options. All her previous dabbling in the world of alternative cures was just practice for what the next few months would hold. All the recommendations we had gotten before were dusted off and invited in to conquer the house of cancer. The time had arrived for her to fight from a different place now. She continued with a renewed fervor, her exploration in alternative ways to cure her cancer and calm her soul. The time had come for a real miracle. $27.00 memoir Territory: USC MAY Linda Daly served as the environmental expert at the Los Angeles Times Magazine, and maintained the blog Pretty in Green. Linda was a founding board member of Vintage Hollywood, which raises funds to help children in Southern California, and Global Hunger Foundation, which seeks to alleviate hunger around the globe through small grants to women’s groups interested in sustainable farming. She currently lives in Los Angeles with her husband and two children. They have four dogs, a duck, a horse, and too many tomato plants. 10 © Carolyn Hampton 11 The Ice Bridge New work by the critically acclaimed author of Cape Breton Road A Novel D. R. MacDonald Anna Starling flees a dissolving marriage in California to save herself and her artistic career, and rents a house in the isolated landscape of Cape Breton. There, her life intersects with that of her neighbor Red Murdock, a cabinetmaker who has recently lost Rosaire, the great love of his life, to cancer. Surrounded by the old ghosts of this landscape and the echoes of the indigenous Scottish culture that once lived in this isolated community, Anna and Murdock slowly come together just as the modern world encroaches on their town. When a local drug-smuggling ring starts to impede on their natural landscape, Anna finds herself caught in the crosshairs, and both she and Murdock must shake off the past in order to contend with the dark forces swirling all around them. Part love story, part moral fable, and part quest for home and heart, The Ice Bridge is a superbly crafted tale of love after love, a novel rich in atmosphere and infused with lyrical descriptions of land and sea. It is about timeless characters caught in a distinctly modern world. Written with an ear for the cadences of Cape Breton and a profound understanding of the many emotional shadings that exist between the sexes, The Ice Bridge is another superb work from D. R. MacDonald. 978-1-61902-118-1 cloth 6" × 9" 352 pages Marketing • National print campaign targeting top 20 dailies and magazines and literary outlets • National radio campaign targeting shows at NPR • Online campaign featuring blogs, interviews, and podcasts • Book club outreach Of Note • MacDonald is a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford University • MacDonald is a frequent contributor to Epoch States. He has received two Pushcart Prizes, an Ingram Merrill Award, and an O. Henry Award for his short fiction. His first novel, Cape Breton Road, was called “a jewel of literary craftsmanship” by Scott Turow, a “book of heart-stopping beauty” by Alistair MacLeod, and became a national bestseller. His second novel, Lauchlin of the Bad Heart, was long-listed for the Giller Prize. MacDonald teaches at Stanford University, lives in the San Francisco Bay Area, and summers in Nova Scotia. Photo courtesy of the author “Compelling in its beauty and set against a landscape that is depicted with exquisite care, this novel crackles with suspense and will transport the reader to the heights and depths of intimacy.” —Alistair MacLeod Excerpt from The Ice Bridge The stars were like ice-points . . . Only faintly was she aware of a car curving down the mountain road she had just travelled, it seemed almost alien in the stillness, slowing as it gained the causeway and climbed to the bridge above. She could hear the soft rumble of its exhaust, and then a door seemed to open. She looked up at the figure at the railing backlit by headlights, something in his arms. He flung it upward as if releasing a bird, and Anna saw a silhouette of legs scrambling in air, the animal giving out a single, tortured bark as it plummeted, turning over several times before; with a tiny splash, it penetrated the sinuous currents beneath the bridge. $26.00 fiction Territory: US MAY D. R. MacDonald was born in Cape Breton and grew up mostly in the United 12 Praise for Lauchlin of the Bad Heart ALSO AVAILABLE All the men are sleeping: Stories Trade Paper • $16.50 978-1-58243-241-0 “Such great and captivating fluency with the physical, the natural and most particularly with the humal realm of events. These wonderful stories have been a revelation to me . . . MacDonald is an extraordinary writer.” —Richard Ford 13 Between My Father and the King Names for the Sea New and Uncollected Stories Strangers in Iceland JANET FRAME Sarah Moss Previously uncollected—and in many cases unpublished—stories by the brilliant Janet Frame This new collection of twenty-eight short stories spans the length of Frame’s career and contains some of the best she wrote. None of these stories have been published in a collection before, and more than half are published for the first time. One story, “Gorse is Not People,” caused Frame a setback in 1954 when Charles Brasch rejected it for publication in Landfall and, along with others for one reason or other, deliberately remained unpublished during her lifetime. Previously published pieces have appeared in Harper’s Bazaar, NZ Listener, New Zealand School Journal, Landfall, and The New Yorker over the years, and one otherwise unpublished piece, “The Gravy Boat,” was read aloud by Frame for a radio broadcast in 1953. In these stories readers will recognize familiar themes, scenes, characters, and locations from Frame’s writing and life, and each offers a fresh fictional transformation that will captivate and absorb. Marketing • National print review campaign focusing on top 20 dailies and magazines • Online campaign targeting literary blogs and outlets also available Prizes: The Selected Stories of Janet Frame Trade Paper • $16.95 978-1-58243-620-3 Towards Another Summer Trade Paper • $14.95 978-1-58243-582-4 Praise for Janet Frame “Like every writer worth remembering, Frame exploits—or creates on the page, to be absolutely puristic about it—her peculiar sensibility, her private window into the universe.” —The New York Times Book Review “Janet Frame proves the master of nostalgia, beauty, and loss. Frame is, and will remain, divine.” —Alice Sebold “Quite simply, she’s a stunning writer.” —The Dominion Post (New Zealand) “A poetic soul has rarely come better disguised.” —Jane Campion “One of the most sensitve, forthright, and adventurous illuminators of human consciousness.” —Booklist © Bill Beavis Sarah Moss had a childhood dream of moving to Iceland, sustained by a wild summer there when she was nineteen. In 2009, she saw an advertisement for a job at the University of Iceland and applied on a whim, despite having two young children and a comfortable life in Kent. The resulting adventure was shaped by Iceland’s economic collapse, which halved the value of her salary, by the eruption of Eyjafjallajökull, and by a collection of new friends, including a poet who saw the only bombs to fall on Iceland in 1943, a woman who spoke to elves, and a chef who guided Sarah’s family around the intricacies of Icelandic cuisine. Moss explored hillsides of boiling mud and volcanic craters and learned to drive like an Icelander on the unsurfaced roads that link remote farms and fishing villages in the far north. She watched the northern lights and the comings and goings of migratory birds, and as the weeks and months went by, she and her family learned new ways to live. Names for the Sea is her compelling, beautiful, and very funny account of living in a country poised on the edge of Europe, where modernization clashes with living folklore and ancient ways. Praise for Names for the Sea “It’s then that you realize this isn’t the usual hack piece about the foreigner’s pratfalls with no speaking da lingo, etc. This is a work of humour, for sure, and I loved her puncturing of Icelanders tales of derring-do, the obsession with pride and shame. More than that, it’s a work of strange intelligence that jars like poetry . . . it has beauty enough to feel fictional.” —The Times (UK) TRADE PAPER original Marketing • National print campaign focusing on top dailies as well as travel and cultural outlets • Radio campaign targeting travel and cultural shows on NPR • Online campaign • Promotion through the author’s website: www.sarahmoss.org Also available 978-1-61902-169-3 cloth 5.5" × 8.25" 256 pages $26.00 STORIES Territory: US may Janet Frame (1924–2004) was one of New Zealand’s most distinguished writers. She is best known for An Angel at My Table, which The Sunday Times of London called “one of the great autobiographies written in the twentieth century,” and which inspired Jane Campion’s internationally acclaimed film. Throughout her long career, Frame received a wide range of awards, including honorary membership in the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize for Literature. 14 “One of the most enjoyable travel books I’ve read . . . this book [has] beauty enough to feel fictional.” —The Times (UK) 978-1-61902-122-8 trade paper original 5.5" × 8.25" 368 pages $17.95 memoir/TRAVEL Territory: US MAY Cold earth Trade Paper • $14.95 978-1-58243-579-4 Sarah Moss was educated at Oxford University and is associate professor of creative writing at Warwick University. She is the author of two critically acclaimed novels, Cold Earth and Night Walking, which was selected for the Fiction Uncovered Award in 2011, and is the coauthor of Chocolate: A Global History. She spent 2009–10 as a visiting lecturer at the University of Iceland and now lives in west Cornwall. Photo courtesy of the author 15 All the Dead Yale Men A Novel The long-awaited sequel to Nova’s classic novel The Good Son CRAIG NOVA Originally published in 1982 to wide acclaim, The Good Son remains Craig Nova’s undisputed masterpiece. This classic explored the complicated entanglements of fathers and sons—expressed in the story of nouveau-riche father Pop Mackinnon, who used his wealth to manipulate his son Chip into the “right” kind of marriage upon the young man’s return from World War II. Chip eventually gave up the love of his life and married to secure his future—and what were the consequences of that decision? All the Dead Yale Men answers that question by telling the story of Frank Mackinnon, son of Chip, a prosecutor in Boston with a happy marriage and a daughter set to follow his footsteps into law school. Chip’s death throws Frank into his family’s legacy, where he must contend with the inheritance of the Mackinnons’ beloved land and a bevy of secrets that dates back three generations. And when Frank’s daughter Pia falls under the sway of local bad boy Aurlon Miller, his grief over his father’s death triggers the family legacy of social standing and manipulation to begin anew, leading Frank to the darkest edges of what a father will do to protect the ones he loves. All the Dead Yale Men examines the end of an era, how privilege and inheritance often crumble in the face of the modern world, a story enriched by the setting and mythology of Boston and its surroundings. This novel heralds the arrival of a new American classic. Marketing • National print campaign targeting top 20 dailies, magazines, and literary journals • National radio campaign targeting shows at NPR • Online campaign featuring blogs, interviews, and podcasts • Feature at ALA • Promotion through the author’s website: www.craignova.com Of Note • Nova is the author of thirteen books and his work has been translated into ten languages Praise for The Good Son “The Good Son is the work of an artist in full command, and those of you entering it for the first time can only be envied.” —Jonathan Yardley, The Washington Post “An exquisitely delineated battle between father and son . . . The structure and the language of this novel are almost without fault.” —John Irving, The New York Times Book Review Praise for The Constant Heart 978-1-58243-828-3 cloth 6" × 9" 352 pages $26.00 fiction Territory: W June Craig Nova is the award-winning author of twelve novels and one autobiography. His writing has appeared in Esquire, The Paris Review, The New York Times Magazine, and Men’s Journal, among others. He has received an Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and is a recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship. In 2005 he was named Class of 1949 Distinguished Professor in the Humanities at the University of North Carolina, Greensboro. 16 Photo courtesy of the author “Superb in prose and its evocations of character and nature, The Constant Heart is a wonderful novel by a writer whose range continues to dazzle me. As a writer, I marveled at the pure scope of Nova’s gifts as a storyteller. As a reader, I simply enjoyed my ride through the emotional heart of this affecting novel.” —Oscar Hijuelos “Nova has again produced expertly drawn characters and carefully measured, suspenseful prose with some surprises, all with undertones orbiting around Einstein’s cosmological constant theory of relativity.” —Publishers Weekly (starred) Also Available The Constant Heart Cloth • $25.00 978-1-61902-023-8 “[A] meditative, philosophical, and beautifully realized novel about the nature of embattled American manhood. Both Jake and his father are deeply sympathetic characters, and Nova celebrates perhaps most fundamentally here the compassionate and honorable way they treat the women in their lives. This is a novel of deep maturity and thoughtfulness.” —Library Journal 17 The Guy Davenport Reader Inconvenient People Lunacy, Liberty, and the Mad-Doctors in England Guy Davenport Selected with an afterword by Erik Reece Sarah WISE “The difference between the Parthenon and the World Trade Center, between a French wine glass and a German beer mug, between Bach and John Philip Sousa, between Sophocles and Shakespeare, between a bicycle and a horse, though explicable by historical moment, necessity, and destiny, is before all else a difference of imagination. The imagination is like the drunk man who has lost his watch, and must get drunk again to find it. It is as intimate as speech and custom, and to trace its ways we need to re-educate our eyes.” —Guy Davenport Marketing • National print review campaign focusing on top 20 dailies and magazines as well as top literary journals • Outreach to Southern journals and publications • National radio campaign for interview opportunities with Erik Reece, Davenport’s literary executor Modernism spawned the greatest explosion of art, architecture, literature, painting, music, and dance of any era since the Renaissance. In its long unfolding, from Yeats, Pound, and Eliot to Picasso and Matisse, from Diaghilev and Balanchine to Cunningham and Stravinsky and Cage, the work of Modernism has provided the cultural vocabulary of our time. One of the last pure Modernists, Guy Davenport was perhaps the finest stylist and most protean craftsman of his generation. Publishing more than two dozen books of fiction, essays, poetry, and translations over a career of more than forty years, he was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship in 1990. In poetry and prose, Davenport drew upon the most archaic and the most modern of influences to create what he called “assemblages”—lush experiments that often defy classification. Woven throughout is a radical and coherent philosophy of desire, design, and human happiness. But never before have Davenport’s fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and translations been collected together in one compendium. Eight years after his death, The Guy Davenport Reader offers the first true introduction to the far-ranging work of this neglected genius. A captivating look into the social history of madness The phenomenon of false allegations of mental illness is as old as our first interactions as human beings. Every one of us has described some other person as crazy or insane, and most all of us have had periods, moments at least, of madness. But it took the confluence of the law and medical science, mad-doctors, alienists, priests, and barristers, to raise the matter to a level of “science,” capable of being used by conniving relatives, “designing families,” and scheming neighbors to destroy people who found themselves in the way, people whose removal could provide their survivors with money or property or other less frivolous benefits. Girl, Interrupted is only a recent example. And reversing this sort of diagnosis and incarceration became increasingly more difficult, as even the most temperate attempt to leave these “homes” or “hospitals” was deemed “crazy.” Kept in a madhouse, one became a little mad, as Jack Nicholson and Ken Kesey manifest in One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest. In this sadly terrifying, emotionally moving, and occasionally hilarious book, twelve cases of contested lunacy are offered as examples of the shifting arguments regarding what constitutes sanity and insanity. They offer unique insight into the fears of sexuality, inherited madness, greed, and fraud, until public feeling shifted and turned against the rising alienists who would challenge liberty and freedom of people who were perhaps simply “difficult,” but were turned into victims of this unscrupulous trade. Filled with stories almost impossible to believe, this book is one the reader will not soon forget. Praise for The Italian Boy “Wise lights up a very dark chapter of London’s history . . . Her achievement allows us to grasp some of the terrible secrets those mysteries concealed.” —The Boston Globe 978-1-61902-103-7 cloth 6" × 9" 400 pages $30.00 literature Territory: W June © Erik Reece $28.00 history Territory: US June Guy Davenport was born in South Carolina and lived for more than forty years Sarah Wise studied at Birkbeck College at the University of London. in Lexington, Kentucky, where he died in 2005. The author of more than twenty books, including Geography of the Imagination, Eclogues, and The Death of Picasso, he was also a distinguished professor at the University of Kentucky and a MacArthur Fellow in 1990. Her most recent book, The Blackest Streets, was shortlisted for the Ondaatje Prize (2009) and her first book, The Italian Boy: Murder and Grave Robbery in London, was shortlisted for the 2005 Samuel Johnson Prize and won the Crime Writers’ Association Gold Dagger for Nonfiction. She lives in London. Erik Reece, himself a student of Davenport and now his literary executor, is also the author of Lost Mountain, An American Gospel, and Field Work. 18 978-1-61902-171-6 CLOTH 6" × 9" 480 pages Marketing • National print review campaign focusing on top dailies, magazines, and history outlets • Radio campaign targeting shows at NPR and top 10 markets • Online campaign featuring blogs and interviews • Promotion through the author’s website: www.sarahwise.co.uk Of Note • One of the first patient advocacy groups was called The Alleged Lunatics’ Friend Society and founded in 1838 by a man who found himself unable to regain his freedom from an asylum after recovering from a breakdown © Katie Vandyck 19 Rake Michael Connelly called Scott Phillips “dark, dangerous, and important” A Novel Scott Phillips The landscape of contemporary Paris—the best restaurants, the trendiest bars and clubs—is usually filled with the wealthy, the famous, and le rake or le roué, the charming, educated sophisticate with little or no conscience. Into this cushy world bursts “Dr. Crandall Taylor”—or rather the actor who plays him—the star of a dated American soap opera that is now one of the hottest primetime shows in France. And this newfound fame, as enriching as it is unexpected, is not wasted on Crandall, who is eager to put his dark and often violent American past behind him and enjoy all the fruits—and the women—that Paris and fame have to offer him. But TV fame isn’t enough. Randall wants a feature film. Every actor wants a feature film, and so Crandall uses his charm and intellect to draw into his narcissistic web four different women: an executive at the network that runs his show; an American porn star reaching new heights on the Internet; a bookish university student with a slightly nasty bent; and the beautiful would-be actress wife of an arms dealer. Against his better judgment, Crandall accepts both the arms dealer’s cash and his beautiful wife’s advances. Soon, Crandall is on the run through the alleys and streets of Paris, trying not only to fund a film but simply to stay alive. But this is no ordinary chase—and Crandall is no ordinary mouse—and soon his penchant for violence, sex, and megalomania erupts into full blown war. Rake is the latest noir classic from the author of The Ice Harvest. Phillips turns his gimlet eye on the lush life of an actor who, on his destructive tour through Paris, crosses the line from garden variety narcissism into full-fledged psychopathy. 978-1-61902-151-8 CLOTH 6" × 9" 256 pages Marketing • National print media campaign targeting The New York Times, Harper’s, The New York Review of Books, and other major reviewers of fiction • National radio campaign targeting shows at NPR and top 10 markets • Online marketing campaign targeting literature and noir blogs and websites as well as online book groups • Promotion through the author’s website: www.scottphillipsauthor.com • Events in the Midwest, Los Angeles, and the San Francisco Bay Area Of Note • The Adjustment was an Indie Next Pick • The Ice Harvest won the California Book Award in 2001, a Silver Medal for Best First Fiction, and was a finalist for the Edgar Award, the Hammett Prize, and the Anthony Award • This will be published in October by Editions La Branche in France. • Rake is currently under film option to Les Films Arianne Praise for The Adjustment “This is Wayne’s story, and what makes it memorable is his hulking presence, drifting through the world as hungry and blank-eyed as a shark . . . There’s something compelling about that sort of rage, about its compression, its control . . . But what draws us to the book is Phillips’ taut and vicious vision, so clean we cannot help but inhabit it, even when we find ourselves repelled.” —Los Angeles Times Excerpt from Rake You know me, or more precisely you have the distinct impression that you know me; it probably amounts to the same thing, from your point of view at least. For five years I played Dr. Crandall Taylor, dissolute, randy, ne’er-do-well bastard son of Senator Harwood Taylor on an American soap opera called Ventura County. No one paid the show any attention at all back home, where it ran five days a week at eleven in the morning, watched only by the loneliest and horniest of housewives and the laziest of college students. In Europe, though, they had the bright idea of running us in the evening, right at the start of prime time, and to everyone’s surprise we turned into a massive hit. With each one-hour episode cut in half, our five-year run will last ten over here, and though the show’s been out of production for three years we’re still a success in most of Europe, with several years’ worth of episodes still to run. $25.00 fiction Territory: WE june Scott Phillips is the author of The Ice Harvest, The Walkaway, Cottonwood, and The Adjustment. He was born and raised in Wichita, Kansas, and lived for many years in France. Also Available THE ADJUSTMENT Trade Paper • $14.95 978-1-58243-823-8 “What draws us to the book is Phillips’ taut and vicious vision, so clean we cannot help but inhabit it, even when we find ourselves repelled.” —Los Angeles Times “Written in pitch-perfect noir form.” —Library Journal “Sly and worthy . . . Crime fans, especially those who favor a vivid sense of place and time, will love it.” —Booklist 20 © Tex Lebeauf “The author’s unapologetic depiction of a thoroughly bad egg will appeal to hard-boiled fans who don’t need redeeming features to become engaged with a character.” —Publishers Weekly 21 Castaways of the Image Planet Stolen Glimpses, Captive Shadows Movies, Show Business, Public Spectacle Writing on Film 2002–2012 geoffrey o’brien geoffrey o’brien “A series of encounters and re-encounters with movies of several decades . . . A smooth after-dinner drink.” —Publishers Weekly One of our best cultural critics here collects sixteen years’ worth of essays on film and popular culture. Topics range from the invention of cinema to contemporary F/X aesthetics and from Shakespeare on film to Seinfeld, and we include essays on 1930’s screwball comedies, Hong Kong martial arts movies, to the roots of spy movies, and the televising of Clinton’s grand jury testimony. O’Brien emphasizes the unpredictable interactions between film as a medium apt for expressing the most private dreams and film as the mass literature of the modern world. Several of the pieces are profiles of individual actors or directors— Orson Welles, Michael Powell, Ed Wood, Marlon Brando, Alfred Hitchcock, Dana Andrews, The Marx Brothers, Bing Crosby—whose careers are probed to look for the point where obsession meets public mythmaking. now in PAPERback Marketing • National “Now in Paperback” campaign Praise for Geoffrey O’Brien “No one writes more thoughtfully, fair-mindedly and elegantly about film these days than Geoffrey O’Brien. In a lucid if understated manner, he keeps piling insight upon insight until you have to gasp at his overall brilliance, erudition and mastery of the critical enterprise.” —Philip Lopate Splendors and surprises of the movie-watching experience, explored in depth “We watch what is moving fast from a platform that is also moving fast,” writes Geoffrey O’Brien in the beginning of Stolen Glimpses, Captive Shadows. This collection—gathering the best of a decade’s worth of writing on film by one of our most bracing and imaginative critics—ranges freely over the past, present, and future of the movies, from the primal visual poetry of the silent era to the dizzying permutations of the merging digital age. Here are thirty-eight searching essays on contemporary blockbusters like Spider-Man and Minority Report; recent innovative triumphs like The Tree of Life and Beasts of the Southern Wild; and the intricacies of genre mythmaking from Chinese martial arts films to the horror classics of Val Lewton. O’Brien probes the visionary art of classic filmmakers—von Sternberg, Fod, Cocteau, Kurosawa, Godard—and the implications of such diverse recent work as Farenheit 9/11, The Passion of Christ, and The Sopranos. Each of these pieces is alert to the always-surprising intersections between screen life and real life, and the way that film from the beginning has shaped our sense of memory and history. Praise for Geoffrey O’Brien Marketing “Geoffrey O’Brien displays an impressive personal scholarship that reflects both an emotional and intellectual reaction to Hollywood movies and popular culture. This book is a must-read for anyone interested in serious thinking about mass entertainment and the wider shores of cinema.“ —Molly Haskell “O’Brien presents a series of encounters and re-encounters with movies of the past seceral decades . . . A smooth after-dinner drink. —Kirkus 978-1-61902-160-0 trade paper 6" × 9" 256 pages $16.95 film essays Territory: USC June 978-1-61902-170-9 cloth 6" × 9" 288 pages • National print and online campaign targeting film criticism outlets • Online promotion • Outreach to bookstores specializing in art and film titles $25.00 film essays Territory: We June Geoffrey O’Brien is editor-in-chief of the Library of America and a regular contributor to The New York Review of Books. His latest books are Early Autumn and The Fall of the House of Walworth (September 2012). He is a widely published poet, critic, editor, and cultural historian and has been honored with a Whiting Award and fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the New York Institute for the Humanities. He lives in New York City. 22 © Nina Subin 23 The People’s Advocate The Life and Legal History of America’s Most Fearless Public Interest Lawyer The inside story of over a dozen landmark cases of the last forty years Daniel sheEHan The People’s Advocate is the autobiography of American Constitutional Trial Attorney Daniel Sheehan. Sheehan traces his personal journey from his working-class roots through Harvard Law School and his initial career in private practice. His early disenchantment led to his return for further study at Harvard Divinity School. Eventually his role as president and chief trial counselor for the famous Washington, D.C.–based Christic Institute would help define his role as America’s preeminent cause lawyer. In The People’s Advocate, Sheehan details “the inside story” of over a dozen historically significant American legal cases of the twentieth century, all told from the point of view of a central lawyer. The remarkable cases covered in the book include both The Pentagon Papers Case of 1971 and The Watergate Burglary Case of 1973. In addition, Sheehan served as the chief attorney on The Karen Silkwood Case in 1976, which additionally revealed the C.I.A.’s Israeli Desk had been smuggling 98 percent bomb-grade plutonium to the State of Israel and to Iran. In 1984, he was the chief trial counsel on The American Sanctuary Movement Case, establishing the right of American church workers to provide assistance to Central American political refugees fleeing Guatemalan and Salvadoran death squads. His involvement with the sanctuary movement ultimately led to Sheehan’s famous Iran/Contra Federal Civil Racketeering Case against the Reagan/ Bush administration, which he investigated, initiated, filed, and then litigated. The resulting Iran/Contra Scandal nearly brought down that administration, leading Congress to consider the impeachment of over a dozen of the top-ranking officials of the Reagan/Bush administration. 978-1-61902-172-3 cloth 6" × 9" 560 pages marketing • National print review campaign targeting top 20 dailies and history, political, and social awareness outlets • National radio campaign targeting shows at NPR and top 10 markets • Academic outreach for course adoption • Online promotion • Author events in New York City, Washington, D.C., Los Angeles, and the San Francisco Bay Area Of Note •HBO is currently developing a series based on Sheehan’s legal career •Direct outreach to over 100,000 former Christic Institute supporters $28.00 legal memoir Territory: W July The key historically significant cases in The People’s Advocate: The American News Journalist’s Confidential News Source Case, 1968–1972 Eisenstadt v. Baird, 1969–1972 The Pentagon Papers Case, 1971 The Attica Prison Riot, 1971 The Watergate Burglary Case, 1972–1974 The Wounded Knee Occupation Case, 1973–1974 The Karen Silkwood Case, 1974–1979 The Three-Mile Island Case, 1979 The Greensboro Massacre Case, 1979–1985 The First-Degree Murder Defense of Mississippi Mayor Eddie Carthan, 1981–1982 The American Sanctuary Movement Case in Texas, 1984 The Iran/Contra Case, 1986–1991 The Colonel James Sabow Murder Case, 1991–2000 Daniel Sheehan’s forty-year legal career is distinguished by his aggressive and successful work as a federal civil rights attorney. He graduated from Harvard Law School, where he founded the Harvard Civil Rights Law Review and later returned to study at the Harvard Divinity School. He was the president and general counsel for the Christic Institute, as well as the co-director of Mikhail Gorbachev’s State of the World Forum. He is still active in public interest law and teaches at the University of California, Santa Cruz. 24 Photo courtesy of the author 25 Search Party New stories of astonishing grace in an unpredictable world Stories of Rescue Valerie Trueblood In the epigraph to this volume, Penelope Fitzgerald tells us: “If a story begins with a finding, it must end with a searching,” and so we discover each story here to follow the arc of a search, just as each also contains a rescue. What is immediately apparent is that it will be impossible to guess the form this rescue will take or even who it is who’ll require it. Instead, the astonishingly talented Valerie Trueblood has imbued each story with its own depth and mystery, so rescue comes as a surprise to the reader, who is in intimate sympathy for the soul in extremity. And these are diverse characters whose fates, in lesser hands, might be thought of as hopeless: the fired cop turned security guard; the stolid, nineteen-year-old nurses’ aide who will not be going to art school; the cynical radio producer who is dying of breast cancer and on a plane on her way to Lourdes. In these fourteen stories linked by a common transcendent humanity, the writing is confident and clear and original, and often drop-dead stunning, as if the stories were being told by the most casually eloquent among us. Here people expect to be saved and they are saved, sometimes against all odds, not by divine intervention but by other human beings, reminding us how tightly bound we are by earthy bonds of attachment and affection. Marketing • National print review campaign focusing on top 20 dailies and magazines as well as top literary journals • Radio campaign targeting shows at NPR and top 10 markets • Online campaign featuring blogs, posts, podcasts, op-eds, and interviews • Event promotion with other authors, including Jane Vandenburgh • Promotion through the author’s website: www.valerietrueblood.com Of Note • Trueblood was a finalist for the Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award and the Washington State Book Award for Fiction in 2011 • She has contributed to The American Poetry Review, One Story, Yes! Magazine, Narrative, The Northwest Review, The Seattle Review, The Iowa Review, The Seattle Times, The Seattle Weekly, Social Education, and International Short Story Forum (UK) Praise for Seven Loves “Utterly exquisite. An achingly beautiful portrayal of a woman’s life and loves and losses.” —Elizabeth Strout, author of Olive Kitteridge “Intelligent and beautifully written . . . as intricate and perfectly constructed as the movement of a fine Swiss watch.” —Ann Patchett, author of Bel Canto Excerpt from Search Party I didn’t want to think, on this trip. It’s as simple as that. But it’s too late. My mind, steered by force away from my son’s sleeping form in the dark bedroom where my husband must have finished reading to him hours ago, wanders and fidgets over his routines, and alights on his school. I can’t stand his teacher. I say this to myself with deep, poisonous pleasure, up here in the sky. Not just because of her “Mom,” her “Let us take care of everything.” She’s the only teacher, so who is this us ? The living? The little Flores boy, this snub-nosed young woman says with an apologetic grimace, just pollutes the classroom. That’s her word, pollutes. I wonder if she would say it on tape. It’s Rafe, the boy my son is afraid of, of course. Ms. Lemoine is recommending that he be steered to a more suitable school, where there are other children with a similar learning style. 978-1-61902-149-5 trade paper original 5.5" × 8.25" 256 pages $15.95 Stories Territory: we July Valerie Trueblood is the author of the award-winning Seven Loves and the extraordinary earlier collection of stories, Marry or Burn. She lives in Seattle. “That’s Rafe,” my son says with pride, indicating with his shoulder, afraid to point at him. No one plays near Rafe. He kicks over the Lego buildings, pees in the sandpile. Of course he does. Tortures the cat saved from the pound to show the kindergarten Birth. He is heading for major trouble. He’s heading for the pound himself. Also Available Praise for Marry or Burn MARRY OR BURN Trade Paper • $15.95 978-1-58243-598-5 “A large-hearted, utterly human collection of life-experienced narratives so full that it is difficult to read more than one consecutively.” —The Irish Times “Marry or Burn resolutely probes the idea and range of marriage, letting us gaze at a variety of couplings from differing angles, forming a dangerous, sharp-edged mosaic.” —The Seattle Times 26 © Lucien Knuteson 27 Original Death A Mystery of Colonial America Eliot Pattison The third book in The Bone Rattler series throws the reader into the heart of colonial America. Despite the raging war between the French and British, Scottish exile Duncan McCallum has begun to settle into a new life on the fringes of colonial America, traveling the woodlands with his companion Conawago, even joining the old Indian on his quest to find the last surviving members of his tribe. But the joy they feel on reaching the little settlement of Christian Indians is shattered when they find its residents ritually murdered. As terrible as the deaths may be, Conawago perceives something even darker and more alarming: He is convinced they are a sign of a terrible crisis in the spirit world which he must resolve. While trying to make sense of the murders, Duncan is accused by the British army of the crime. Escaping prison to follow the trail of evidence, he finds himself hounded by vengeful soldiers and stalked by Scottish rebels who are mysteriously trying to manipulate the war to their advantage. As he pieces together the puzzle of violence and deception he gradually realizes that it may not only be the lives of Duncan and his friends that hang in the balance, but the very survival of the native tribes. When he finally discovers the terrible truth, Duncan is forced to make a fateful choice between his beloved Highland clans and the woodland natives who have embraced and protected him. A compelling drama marked by the forces shaping America’s early days Marketing • National print media and radio campaign • Book review coverage targeting The New York Times, Harper’s, The New York Review of Books, and other important reviewers of fiction • Online blog tour featuring reviews, podcasts, and interviews with mystery outlets • Promotion through the author’s website: www.eliotpattison.com Of Note • Pattison’s Bone Rattler and Skull Mantra series have sold more than 725,000 copies worldwide • Pattison’s most recent book, Ashes of the Earth, received starred reviews in Publishers Weekly and Booklist Praise for Eye of the Raven “Few writers can combine history and mystery as well as Edgar-winner Pattison . . . Evocative language, tight plotting, and memorable characters make this a standout.” —Publishers Weekly (starred) “The pleasures of Eliot Pattison’s books, and Eye of the Raven is another smashing example, are threefold: high adventure in perilous landscapes, a hero stubbornly seeking the truth, and the haunting mysteries of ancient cultures.” —Otto Penzler, editor of The Vampire Archives Praise for Bone Rattler 978-1-58243-731-6 cloth 6" × 9" 352 pages $26.00 mystery Territory: WE august Eliot Pattison is the author of The Skull Mantra, winner of an Edgar Award and finalist for The Gold Dagger; Water Touching Stone; Bone Mountain; Beautiful Ghosts; Prayer of the Dragon; Bone Rattler; The Lord of Death and most recently Eye of the Raven. Pattison resides in rural Pennsylvania with his wife, three children, two horses, and two dogs on a colonial-era farm. 28 © Jed Ferguson “Pattison’s moving characters, intricate plot and masterful evocation of the time, including sensitive depictions of the effects of the European war on Native Americans, set this leagues beyond most historicals and augur well for future entries in this series.” —Publishers Weekly (starred) “[A] sure winner.” —Booklist Also Available Bone rattler Trade Paper • $15.95 978-1-58243-464-3 eye of the raven Trade Paper • $15.95 978-1-58243-701-9 29 Everyone Says That at the End of the World SOFT SKULL OWEN egerton An outrageous, edge-of-your-seat ride through the last days of life on Earth Earth is the mental asylum of the universe and humans are the incurable inmates. Now the asylum is being shut down. Everyone Says That at the End of the World traces the adventures of a ghosthaunted slacker-couple expecting their first child, an outrageously arrogant television actor seeking redemption, and a prophetic hermit crab on a cross-country quest as they struggle to endure the final four days of life on Earth. Inter-dimensional time-travelers, Jesus clones, and prosthetic limbs all play a role in the catastrophic events leading to the planet’s end. Combining humor, philosophical inquiry, and unforgettable characters, Egerton leads us through the most bizarre apocalypse ever put to paper. Praise for The Book of Harold “A lively and beautifully crafted novel about the anguish of belief.” —Kirkus “I love every word that Owen Egerton writes or utters and The Book of Harold bumps my admiration up to a new level. It takes a brave author to attempt satire these days. But it takes Owen Egerton to make it the wise, hilarious, finely-observed, and, ultimately, compassionate ring-tailed delight that The Book of Harold is.” —Sarah Bird, author of The Gap Year “Only Owen Egerton can create a new religion around a former computer salesman and make you want to up and take a pilgrimage to Austin with the rest of the Haroldians. Egerton has the gift of walking that fine line between hilarity and heart with grace. Follow.” —Elizabeth Crane, author of All This Heavenly Glory TRADE PAPER original Marketing • National print review campaign focusing on top 20 dailies and magazines as well as top literary journals • Online campaign • Author events in Austin, New York City, Los Angeles, and the San Francisco Bay Area • Promotion through the author’s websites: www.bookofharold.com, www.owenegerton.com Of Note 978-1-59376-518-7 trade paper original 6" × 9" 336 pages $15.95 fiction Territory: WE april • The Book of Harold was optioned by Warner Bros. Television • Egerton was voted favorite author in 2007, 2008, and 2010 by readers of The Austin Chronicle Owen Egerton is one of the talents behind the award-winning The Sinus Show and Master Pancake Theater at the Alamo Drafthouse Theater, and for several years was the artistic director of Austin’s National Comedy Theatre. He’s written screenplays for Fox, Warner Bros. and Disney Studios. He is also the author of the one-man play The Other Side of Sleep and the novel The Book of Harold, which is currently in development as a television series with Warner Bros. Television. He lives in Austin. Photo courtesy of the author 31 The Ethical Butcher How to Eat Meat in a Responsible and Sustainable Way A former militant vegan infuses the food revolution with new vigor BERLIN REED America is in the midst of a meat zeitgeist. Butchers have emerged as the rock stars of the culinary world, and cozy gastropubs serving up pork belly, lamb burgers, and sweetbreads rule the restaurant scene. In New York, the humble meatball enjoys entrée status from upscale Gramercy Tavern to newcomer The Meatball Shop. Across the country in San Francisco, savvy chefs flock to hip meat markets like The Fatted Calf. If butchers are our new rock stars, then Berlin Reed is their front man. Berlin Reed is “The Ethical Butcher,” a former self-described militant vegan punk who grudgingly took a job as a butcher’s apprentice in Brooklyn when he could find no other work. Shockingly, he fell in love with the art of butchering, and a food revolution was born. Along the way he saw how corporate greed, unsustainable food practices, and outright misinformation gave birth to such falsities as the USDA label “organic” and the conglomerate of eco-friendly supermarkets. Most people, even those who try to be healthy and green, are not really eating what they think they are eating. The Ethical Butcher shines a light on these untruths and shows a better way towards food justice and the sustainable living of a mindful omnivore. Through the lens of Berlin’s personal story, The Ethical Butcher educates readers about how they can improve the meat industry by participating in it. It’s a memoir in cuts—and Berlin’s return to eating meat illustrates for readers and foodies alike how they can change the meat industry by making better choices. 978-1-59376-505-7 cloth 6" × 9" 434 pages Marketing • National print review campaign focusing on top 20 dailies and magazines • Radio campaign targeting shows at NPR and top 10 markets • Outreach to local food movements • Outreach to Transgender and Queer organizations and publications • Marketing with farmers’ markets and whole food retailers • Online campaign featuring blogs, posts, podcasts, and interviews with major outlets • Promotion through the author’s website: www.theethicalbutcher.blogspot.com • Events in New York City, Montreal, Los Angeles, Austin, the Pacific Northwest, and the San Francisco Bay Area Of Note • Reed has contributed to The Atlantic, Decolonizing Diets, and Original Plumbing $26.00 food memoir Territory: WE april Excerpt from The Ethical Butcher My hand was steady, but my head was spinning. Billy’s eyes were two fixed and glazed cloudy marbles. I traced the topography of the outstretched goat carcass before me with my eyes, then with my hands. When you are so acutely aware of every choice that led you to what you’re about to do, thoughts swirl in the mind. In these moments, for better or worse, we are made most human. The air is charged with energy, caught somewhere between construction and destruction. I have repeated this act countless times in the years since, but that day was my very first turn to break down, or cut up, a whole animal on my own. I had named the goat carcass “Billy.” How a vegetarian of fourteen years ends up at a butcher counter, knife in hand, is where my story begins. This slow and deliberate action, taking in every detail of the animal lying before me is an action every bit as moving to me now as it was that day. Butchers know a certain primal satisfaction as their knives move through flesh and fat, skin and bone. Our skilled carving turns death into life, a carcass into meat. Berlin Reed 32 © Julee Lebert launched The Ethical Butcher blog in 2009 and now travels the country hosting informative farm-to-table dinners that seek to educate the public about how to be sure their choices as consumers match their intentions. He was profiled as one of the country’s top fifty butchers in the book Primal Cuts, and is a charter member and the voice of the newly formed Butcher’s Guild. He’s been featured in O Magazine, on Today.com, and has appeared several times on NPR. He is currently at work on a pilot episode for a TV series that documents his farm-to-table dinners across the country. Reed lives in Montreal. 33 Secrets & Wives Approaching the Future The Hidden World of Mormon Polygamy 64 Things You Need to Know Now for Then sanjiv bhattacharya Ben Hammersley Travels through the landscape of Mormon fundamentalism, where behind every good man there are several good women revised TRADE PAPER Marketing • National media campaign targeting publications and websites that focus on religion, marriage, and women’s issues • Promotion through the author’s website: www.sanjivb.com Of Note • This revised edition includes a new introduction, updates on The Order and the True and Living Church, as well as a new chapter about the 4 o’clock murders What do we really know about modern practicing polygamists— not fictional ones like the Henrickson family on HBO’s Big Love? We’ve seen the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in the news, the underage brides in pioneer dresses on a Texas ranch. But the FLDS is just one of many groups that have broken with mainstream Mormonism to follow those parts of Joseph Smith’s doctrine disavowed by the LDS Church. Gaining unprecedented access to these communities, journalist Sanjiv Bhattacharya reveals a shadow country teeming with small town messiahs, dark secrets, and stories both heartbreaking and strange. Polygamy’s dark side—incest, forced marriages, and physical abuse—is laid bare. But Bhattacharya also finds warmth in the fundamentalist diaspora and even finds himself taking an ideological stand for polygamy’s legalization. More than just an exposé of Mormon polygamy, Secrets and Wives is the personal journey of a foreign atheist and liberal, a stranger in a strange land who grapples with hard questions about marriage, monogamy, and the very nature of faith. Praise for Secrets and Wives “Many of us recognize the stock images of polygamy . . . [But] in Secrets and Wives, British journalist Sanjiv Bhattacharya pushes past these caricatures to show what Mormon polygamists are really like.” —Slate “Though fundamentalist Mormon polygamy is portrayed in a benign light on TV (e.g., Big Love ), the reality is for the most part much grimmer . . . This is a riveting read for both Bhattacharya’s wry and heartfelt style and the nature of the material.” —Library Journal 978-1-59376-521-7 revised Trade papeR 6" × 9" 352 pages $17.95 religion/current affairs Territory: W april Sanjiv Bhattacharya has written for Details, Los Angeles Times Magazine, and Maxim. He has appeared as an expert on polygamy, discussing his Channel Four documentary, The Man with 80 Wives, on MSNBC Live, Montel Williams, and elsewhere. He lives in Connecticut. 34 Photo courtesy of the author “You can feel your mind expanding with each page.” —Financial Times In Approaching the Future, Editor-at-Large for Wired magazine Ben Hammersley offers the essential guide to things we need to know for life in the twenty-first century. Explaining the effects of the changes in the modern world, and the latest ideas in technology, culture, business, and politics, this book will demystify the Internet, decode cyberspace, and guide you through the innovations of the revolution we are all living through. This is for everyone who wants to truly understand the modern world, to no longer be confused by the changes in society, business, and culture, and to truly prosper in the coming decade. Excerpt from Approaching the Future Writing a book about the future is, in most ways, futile. We can’t possibly construct a narrative that will be true. The world is already too weird. But what we can do is show some of the dominant ideas that are shaping the future, and our present, and from those gain an understanding of the direction we’re traveling in. That is what I have tried to do in this book. The sixty-four ideas are all interrelated and are, I believe, changing how we live, work, and relate to each other in ways that are completely new. Understanding them is the first and best step to dealing with our collective future. Each of the sixty-four is an ingredient, which added to another can make something delicious, or potentially very nasty. As we move solidly through the second decade of the twenty-first century, we do well to pay attention to these forces as they shape our lives. Thank you for reading, and please be in touch. TRADE PAPER original Marketing • National print campaign • Promotion through the author’s website: www.benhammersley.com Of Note • Hammersley has been a fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, Royal Geographical Society, and the British American Project 978-1-59376-514-9 trade paper original 6" × 9" 434 pages $16.95 social science/media studies Territory: US april • The author is actively traveling around Europe and the US lecturing Ben Hammersley is a British technologist, journalist, and broadcaster. He is editor-at-large of Wired magazine; the Prime Minister’s Ambassador to Tech City, London’s Internet Quarter; and a member of the European Commission High Level Group on Media Freedom. He is based in London. Photo courtesy of the author 35 Iris Has Free Time Iris Smyles Fresh out of college and on her own in Manhattan, Iris narrates an exuberant, comic and wistful picaresque about the struggles of growing up. A touching evocation of youth in its twilight, a celebration and also a farewell, Iris Has Free Time is a paean to the beauty, sadness and joys of youth on the long eve of adulthood. Whether passed out drunk in The New Yorker’s cartoon office where she’s interning, tanking her first job interview, assigning Cliffs Notes when hired to teach humanities at a local college, aspiring to write the great American novel but settling for a blog about her exboyfriend’s penis instead, trying to piece together the events of yet another puzzling blackout—“I prefer to call them pinkouts, because I’m a girl”—Iris is never short on misadventures. From the quarter life crisis to the shock of turning thirty, Iris charts a madcap, melancholic course through her rocky entry into the real world. Reminiscent of Lena Dunham’s Girls and in the tradition of Elaine Dundy’s Sally Jay Gorce and Truman Capote’s Holly Golightly, Iris is a new American anti-heroine, a unique voice treating age-old subjects of love, sex, work, and identity with a freshness and originality that will startle and charm. “Iris Has Free Time is a hilarious, lyrical, and wise book about youth—its beauty, its folly, and the belief that it will go on forever even as it’s slipping away. You will love this book.” —Diane Keaton, author of Then Again 978-1-59376-519-4 trade paper original 6" × 9" 336 pages The end of youth: when childhood is behind you, and adulthood remains just out of reach Marketing • National print review campaign focusing on top dailies, magazines, and fiction outlets • Focus on making “Summer Read” lists and features • Radio campaign targeting shows at NPR and top 10 markets • Online campaign featuring blogs, interviews, podcasts, and op-eds • Author events in New York City • Promotion through the author’s websites: www.irishasfreetime.com www.irissmyles.com Of Note • This blurs the line between fiction and memoir, as Iris Smyles has written herself as her (fictional) protagonist • Smyles has been awarded The Doris Lippman Prize for Fiction, The Adria Schwartz Award for Women’s Fiction, The Geraldine Griffin Moore Short Story Award, The Meyer Cohen Essay Award, and a Goodman Fund Grant for her magazine Smyles & Fish $15.95 fiction Territory: WE MAY Excerpt from Iris Has Free Time Emily was the assistant to Bob Mankoff, and I was the assistant to Emily who seemed to like me, despite my poor work performance. I conceded that while I was no good as an assistant, I made a wonderful office-friend. Taking my cues from Charles Bukowski and various romantic comedies where career girls discuss their love lives at the water cooler and next to the copy machine, I spent most of my time nursing a hangover and telling Emily all about my adventures with the various single men we worked with, specifically Jed before he became my boyfriend. I first met Jed in the copy room. He said “hi,” and I jumped nervously because I’d been busy copying my own cartoons for my Naked Woman zine instead of whatever it was I was supposed to be doing. I shook his hand and scuttled away. Then I ran into him again in the magazine’s archives, while I was busy retrieving old cartoons to photocopy for my personal scrapbook of favorites. His hello startled me just as it had the first time, and I raced back to my cubicle. The next time he caught up with me in the kitchen; I was wedged between the refrigerator and the coffee machine, trying inconspicuously to transfer the contents of my Colt 45 into a paper cup. He said “hi,” and I began to sweat profusely, terrified the jig was up when he asked me out. I said yes just to get him off my back, finished pouring my “coffee,” and left to hand out the faxes. Later that day Emily charged me with the difficult task of handwriting the addresses on a whole pile of outgoing mail. As I drank more “coffee,” my voice grew louder and my handwriting larger and loopier. Emily, still laughing after my description of Jed’s “proposal” in the kitchen earlier, gently suggested that I write a little smaller. “Perhaps you could write the address on only the middle of the envelope,” she said sweetly, “rather than using all 8 x 11 inches.” Iris Smyles has contributed to Nerve, New York Press, McSweeney’s Internet Tendency, Guernica, KGB BarLit, and BOMB among other publications, as well as several anthologies. She edited and wrote the afterword for The Capricious Critic, (Otis Books 2010), a collection of humor essays she commissioned for her web-zine, Smyles & Fish, was awarded the Don Lippman Prize for fiction, the Adria Schwartz Award for Women’s Fiction, the Geraldine Griffin Moore Short Story Award, and the Meyer Cohen Essay Award, and is a frequent contributor to Splice Today. She lives in New York. 36 © Dawn Earles 37 An Apple a Day A Memoir of Love and Recovery from Anorexia A brave and triumphant study of anorexia Emma Woolf I haven’t tasted chocolate for over ten years and now I’m walking down the street unwrapping a Kit Kat. Remember when Kate Moss said, “Nothing tastes as good as skinny feels”? She’s wrong: chocolate does. For Christmas I’m giving myself a fresh start. I have to get some extra pounds of weight under my belt; I want to make next year the year that everything changes. Marketing At the age of thirty-two, after ten years of hiding from the truth, Emma Woolf finally decided it was time to face the biggest challenge of her life. Addicted to hunger, exercise, and control, she was juggling a full-blown eating disorder with a successful career, functioning on an apple a day. Having met the man of her dreams (and wanting a future and a baby together), she decided it was time to stop starving and start living. And as if that wasn’t enough pressure, Emma also agreed to chart her progress in a weekly column for The Times. Honest, hardhitting, and yet romantic, An Apple a Day is a manifesto for the modern generation. This compelling, life-affirming true story is essential reading for anyone affected by eating disorders (whether as a sufferer or ally), anyone interested in health and social issues, and anyone in the medical and health professions. • Emma is the great-niece of Virginia Woolf 978-1-59376-515-6 trade paper original 6" × 9" 256 pages • National print campaign focusing on top dailies, glossies, and health outlets • Radio campaign targeting health shows on NPR • Online campaign Praise for An Apple a Day • Promotion through Twitter: @ejwoolf “The contrast between her privileged life and her personal misery is strikingly established in this book before she begins to deal positively with her long-standing ‘addiction to hunger’ . . . ‘Coming out’ about her condition and narrating the process of recovery has been as much agony as therapy, but it has been a needful exercise for the writer and her support group of readers.” —The Times Of Note • Practical and proactive, this offers hope and inspiration to the many others with eating disorders out there, and provides insight for those close to sufferers • This could be a great text for course adoption “In An Apple a Day Emma comes across as brave, real and determined. I’m sure that in sharing her story many others will be encouraged to speak out from the stigma of this horrible illness and realise that there is a life worth living beyond calorie counts and scales. It is a battle worth fighting.” —Grace Bowman, author of Thin “Emma is highly intelligent and self-aware, and courageously willing in her memoir to depict the least attractive aspects of anorexia—the intense self-absorption, and troubling mixture of secrecy and attention-seeking . . . a candid, generous and readable account of a very intractable condition.” —Daily Mail “A compelling account of anorexia which in deceptively simple style, really gets under the skin of why people starve themselves. Woolf, the great-niece of Virginia, has already charted her progress in a weekly column for The Times which received a huge response from fellow sufferers and their loved ones.” —The Bookseller $16.95 memoir Territory: NA MAY Born and brought up in London, Emma Woolf studied English at Oxford University. She worked in Psychology publishing for ten years before becoming a freelance journalist and writer, contributing to The Independent, The Times, The Mail on Sunday, Harper’s Bazaar, Grazia, Red and Psychologies. Emma’s weekly “An Apple a Day” column in The Times is one of the newspaper’s most popular features, with thousands of followers online. 38 © Thomas Skovsende 39 Rockaway A lyrical new novel by the author of A Child Out of Alcatraz A Novel Tara Ison Sarah is in a rut, unable to pull the disparate elements of her life into a cohesive whole. She is a painter, and caring for her elderly parents who increasingly need more of her time and energy. Lacking inspiration in pursuit of her art, she exiles herself to the family home of her best friend in the eccentric beachside town of Far Rockaway, New York, hoping against hope for some kind of creative breakthrough. Under the watchful eyes of the married caretakers, Sarah explores her new landscape, searching for elements of inspiration. It is there she meets Marty Zale, an aging musician from a oncepopular rock band whose harmonies still infuse the summertime music festivals. Marty’s devotion to the tenets of both his music and his Judaism work a strange effect on Sarah. The evolution of their awkward and probably doomed relationship leads Sarah to new experiences during her exile, and to surprising revelations about her art, her heart, and how far she has drifted from the person she wants to be. Rockaway is the startling and engaging new novel from a writer praised by Carolyn See as “an important new voice in fiction.” Marketing • National print review campaign focusing on top dailies, magazines, and fiction outlets • Radio campaign targeting shows at NPR and top 10 markets • Online campaign featuring blogs and interviews • Author events in Phoenix, Los Angeles, and the San Francisco Bay Area • Promotion through the author’s website: www.taraison.com Of Note • In another life, Ison cowrote the 1990s cult classic Don’t Tell Mom the Babysitter’s Dead • Ison has been awarded the Artists Fellowship in Prose (fiction), from the National Endowment for the Arts (2008), the Individual Artist Fellowship, City of Los Angeles, Department of Cultural Affairs, (2007–2008), the Yaddo Fellowships (2008, 2004, and 2003), and the California Arts Council Artist’s Fellowship (2002) Praise for A Child Out of Alcatraz “A fascinating and wonderfully evocative first novel about life on Alcatraz, seen through the eyes of a little girl growing up on the Rock in the 1950s. A compelling story, richly evoking a time and place.” —Kirkus “Ison has a gift . . . the fearsome plight of Olivia, who narrates much of the novel, is never simplified. It’s through her radiant consciousness that Ison’s novel achieves a natural, basic morality.” —Publishers Weekly “This is a sad, often beautiful novel . . . Ison renders the slow disintegration of a once-vital woman, and its effect on her daughter, with perfect heartbreaking despair . . . A provocative story.” —The Boston Book Review “What makes A Child Out of Alcatraz particularly memorable is its unique venue . . . the author paints a searing portrait of an American family that might have been typical had fate and history not intervened.” — Glamour 978-1-59376-516-3 trade paper original 5.5" × 8.25" 208 pages $15.95 fiction Territory: W june Praise for The List “The List is visceral, honest, and intensely readable.” —Aimee Bender “The List is both wise and wicked about love.” —Meg Wolitzer Tara Ison is the author of A Child Out of Alcatraz, a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, and The List. Her short fiction and essays have been on Nerve.com and in Tin House, The Kenyon Review, Publishers Weekly, and numerous anthologies. She is currently assistant professor of fiction at Arizona State University. 40 © Michael Phillips 41 Curb Service Bombshell A Novel A Memoir James reich TRADE PAPER original SCOT SOTHERN A thrill-ride—a disenfranchised activist on a road trip across nuclear America Explorating the seedy streets of Los Angeles in the late 1980s Bombshell is a feminist nuclear thriller set twenty-five years after the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, in which an alienated young Russian woman born in its shadow undertakes a road trip across the United States, waging a guerrilla war against the nuclear industry and leaving in her wake a trail of destruction and assassinations. Obsessed with would-be Warhol assassin Valerie Solanas, Varyushka Cash recreates her atomic past through escalating violence and her one true goal: an assault on the Indian Point nuclear plant on the bank of the Hudson River. All along she is relentlessly pursued by the CIA, which is eager to capture Varyushka on charges of domestic terrorism. The cat-and-mouse chase leads to a final showdown in a decimated and irradiated New York, there on the cusp of a frightening new future. The initial draft of Bombshell was completed five months before the Fukushima catastrophe, an echo in the present, shadowed by the real threat present in our unguarded and deteriorating nuclear facilities. Bombshell is a combustible step forward by one of our most creative and intellectual writers today. Cruising nighttime byways for an adrenaline fix, Scot Sothern first patronized the marketplace of curbside prostitution, surfing the prurient whims of a young man. He dove to the murky depths of sexual obsession and resurfaced five years later, shell-shocked and without excuse. While there, trusty Nikon in hand, Scot, a secondgeneration photographer, made full-frontal X-rated exposures, black and white, filled with pathos and a brutal realism. Now he is ready to tell the story behind the photographs, the confessions of a befuddled baby boomer maintaining a slippery connection to propriety while side-tripping into noirish infatuations with those low in life. Curb Service recounts Sothern’s past as a troubled kid in the 1960s who visited two-dollar whorehouses and as an adult in the 1980s was still at it. A photographer who either can’t get a break or blows it when one comes his way, Scot wants to hold onto jobs, wives, and relationships; he tries to be a good father to the son he loves. Yet he continues picking up street prostitutes, photographing them, having sex with them, living moments of their lives, and watching them fade away in a culture that deems them criminal and expendable. Sothern’s photography was collected in the book Lowlife, to great critical acclaim. In Curb Service, he finally tells the stories behind the photographs. Praise for I, Judas Marketing • Promotion at Thrillerfest and Ladyfest • Promotion through the author’s website: www.jamesreichbooks.com Of Note “Reading I, Judas, I found myself often provoked, occasionally disgusted or even enraged, and always riveted. It’s not often that a book or a writer not only confounds my expectations, but makes me question a set of assumptions I didn’t even know I held.” —Julie Powell, author of Julie and Julia “Lowlife is a moving and compelling piece of work.” —Henry Rollins Also Available I, JUDAS Trade Paper • $15.95 978-1-59376-421-0 978-1-59376-513-2 trade paper original 5.5" × 8.25" 256 pages $15.95 fiction Territory: NAO July James Reich is a writer and cofounder of the post-punk band Venus Bogardus. He was born in England and relocated to New Mexico in 2009. He is currently a contributing faculty member at Santa Fe University of Art and Design. He is the author of I, Judas. 42 Photo courtesy of the author 978-1-59376-520-0 trade paper original 6" × 9" 288 pages Marketing • National print campaign targeting photography outlets • Radio campaign targeting top 10 markets Praise for Lowlife “Lowlife is brutal stuff. It doesn’t get much further down and straight to the being than this.” —Barry Gifford • Reich has contributed to The Rumpus, Bold Type, Headpress, SleepingFish, and TheEndofBeing.com TRADE PAPER original $18.95 memoir/cultural studies Territory: WE July • Online promotion through the author’s website: www.scotsothern.com • Events in Los Angeles and San Francisco Of Note • Sothern has been actively exhibiting in galleries across the United States • Sothern has contributed to a great deal of photography outlets, from journals to magazines to websites Scot Sothern spent forty unsettled years hustling freelance photography. He worked in department stores, churches, bowling alleys, sports events, and high school proms. He worked in a cave at a tourist-trap in Missouri, making and selling photo mementos. Sothern shot models’ portfolios, head-shots, and nude magazine layouts. Forced into commercial retirement by the crippling byproduct of a motorcycle mishap, Sothern now writes books and has continued making photographs. Photo courtesy of the author 43 Not Your Mother’s Meatloaf A Sex Education Comic Book Saiya Miller & Liza Bley A refreshed approach to sex education TRADE PAPER original As teenagers today navigate increasingly fluid identities and choices, there is a demand for an accessible, interactive tool to help share knowledge about sex and sexual health, one that demystifies the facts and speaks frankly about experiences where lessons often fall into gray areas. Since 2008, Miller and Bley have held an open call for young people to create comics that address a variety of topics involved with sex education. They have since produced several issues of a sex-ed comic called Not Your Mother’s Meatloaf. The work is chosen from a vastly varied group of submissions and attempts to challenge hetero and gender normative practices in sex education. The comics address topics like body image, safer sex, consent, and relationships from positions that have often been left out of sex education. These graphically illustrated personal narratives address different themes, such as “Firsts,” “Bodies,” “Health,” “Age,” and “Endings.” The book brings together the best of the material from the Not Your Mother’s Meatloaf comics, along with new graphic stories and writing by the editors, which provides personal and sociological background. Marketing • National print campaign focusing on the top 20 dailies and magazines as well as health outlets • Radio campaign targeting shows at NPR and top 10 markets • Online print campaign featuring blogs, podcasts, and interviews • Academic outreach for course adoptions • Promotion to sexuality conferences • Promotion through the authors’ website: www.sexedcomicproject.blogspot.com 978-1-59376-517-0 trade paper original 6" × 9" 272 pages $15.95 sexuality/health Territory: W august Saiya Miller graduated from Eugene Lang College, The New School for Liberal Arts. She has worked as an educator and activist, teaching art and music, as well as using comics and zines in workshops for teenagers. She lives in Brooklyn, NY, and Vermont. Liza Bley studied writing in New York City, where she also 44 Photos courtesy of the authors worked at Make, a craft and sewing school, and contributed samples to the book Embroider Everything Workshop. NEW PAPERBACKS New Collected Poems A welcome publishing event by a major poet of our time Wendell Berry In New Collected Poems, the poet revisits for the first time his immensely popular Collected Poems, which The New York Times Book Review described as “a straightforward search for a life connected to the soil, for marriage as a sacrament and family life” that “affirms a style that is resonant with the authentic,” and “[returns] American poetry to a Wordsworthian clarity of purpose.” In New Collected Poems, Berry reprints the nearly two hundred pieces in Collected Poems, along with the poems from his most recent collections—Entries, Given, and Leavings—to create an expanded collection, showcasing the work of a man heralded by The Baltimore Sun as “a sophisticated, philosophical poet in the line descending from Emerson and Thoreau . . . a major poet of our time.” Wendell Berry is the author of over fifty works of poetry, fiction, and nonfiction, and has been awarded numerous literary prizes, including the T. S. Eliot Award, a National Institute of Arts and Letters award for writing, the American Academy of Arts and Letters Jean Stein Award, and a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship. While he began publishing work in the 1960s, according to Booklist, “Berry has become ever more prophetic,” clearly standing up to the test of time. 978-1-61902-152-5 trade paper 6" × 9" 352 pages 46 © Guy Mendes Marketing • National “Now in Paperback” campaign • National radio and online campaigns • Promotion through: www.wendellberrybooks. com and http://brtom.typepad.com/wberry Of Note • There are more than 600,000 copies of Wendell Berry’s titles in print • President Obama awarded Berry the 2010 National Humanities Medal and honored him “for his achievements as a poet, novelist, farmer, and conservationist” • Berry delivered the 41st Jefferson Lecture in the Humanities in April 2012 $18.95 poetry Territory: W april Praise for New Collected Poems “A sophisticated, philosophical poet in the line descending from Emerson and Thoreau . . . a major poet of our time.” —The Baltimore Sun “So eloquent and substantial are Berry’s fiction and essays that his poetry can seem ancillary. Read in chronology and near-completely in this volume, however, his verse shines out as the radiant heart of his prophetic art. He has been the foremost American poet of place, which for him means the Kentucky farming community in which he has lived and worked as farmer-writer in the tradition of Hesiod and Virgil, demonstrating the propriety and the virtue of living with the land and its creatures and arguing vehemently and cogently for the integrity of agriculture as the basis of human thriving. Berry’s poems initially show him discovering his understanding of the world and human livelihood and then how that understanding works out in the lives of his family and community members; that is, in farming as a calling, a tradition, and a passion. Yes, nature is often his subject, but death is his most frequent concern, which he probes and ponders until there is nothing fearsome left in it. As his poetic career progresses, cogitation decreases, storytelling increases, and, most lately, epigram burgeons with stinging and amusing effectiveness. Moreover, reading his poems is like drinking fresh springwater.” —Booklist (starred) Wendell Berry is the author of more than fifty books of poetry, fiction, and ALSO AVAILABLE essays. He was recently awarded the National Humanities Medal, the Cleanth Brooks Medal for Lifetime Achievement by the Fellowship of Southern Writers, and the Louis Bromfield Society Award. For more than forty years he has lived and farmed with his wife, Tanya, in Kentucky. THE COUNTRY OF MARRIAGE: POEMS Trade Paper • $12.95 978-1-61902-108-2 FARMING: A HAND BOOK Trade Paper • $15.95 978-1-58243-763-7 LEAVINGS: POEMS Trade Paper • $14.95 978-1-58243-624-1 47 Of Woodland Pools, Spring-Holes & Ditches The Poetry of William Carlos Williams of Rutherford Excerpts from the Journal of Henry David Thoreau wendell berry Henry David Thoreau; Engravings by Abigail Rorer; Introduction by Bradley P. Dean TRADE PAPER Marketing • National “Now in Paperback” campaign • Promotion through the author’s website: www.theloneoakpress.com Excerpts from Thoreau’s journal with twenty-eight relief engravings A testament of admiration, respect, and gratitude for one of the most influential poets of all time Henry David Thoreau has long been revered for his writings and observations on the natural world. His words evoke his environment with stunning clarity as well as his own innate sense of wonder. His journal, from which the text of Of Woodland Pools, Spring-Holes & Ditches is drawn, shares these strengths, providing an intimate view of Thoreau’s day-to-day existence. The selected excerpts are pulled from the months of March, April, and May, and all pertain to what are now called vernal pools—temporary pools of water, free of fish, at their peak in the spring, and the breeding ground for numerous creatures. In this volume, Thoreau’s words are accompanied by twentyeight engravings by artist Abigail Rorer. The delicacy and detail of these engravings make them the perfect companion to Thoreau’s words, adding another layer of beauty to his observations. Each engraving is a work of art in and of itself, enriched by the text and Thoreau’s visionary descriptions. The engravings are based on the woods and vernal pools explored by Thoreau, lending them undeniable authenticity. Thoreau once proclaimed, “I have an appointment with spring.” Through his words and Rorer’s art, so too does the reader. Acclaimed essayist and poet Wendell Berry was born and has always lived in a “provincial” part of the country without an established literary culture. In an effort to adapt his poetry to his place of Henry County, Kentucky, Berry discovered an enduringly useful example in the work of William Carlos Williams. In Williams’ commitment to his place of Rutherford, New Jersey, Berry found an inspiration that inevitably influenced the direction of his own writing. Both men would go on to establish themselves as respected American poets, and here Berry sets forth his understanding of that evolution for Williams, who in the course of his local membership and service, became a poet indispensable to us all. 978-1-61902-173-0 trade paper 10" × 8" 96 pages $18.95 literature Territory: W april Abigail Rorer is the founder of The Lone Oak Press, which publishes award-winning fine press books, broadsides, and ephemera with wood engravings and etchings. The winner of many awards, including the Outstanding Print from Overseas from the British Society of Wood Engravers, she lives in Petersham, MA. Bradley P. Dean © Latrice Cooper 48 was the editor of the Thoreau Society Bulletin for eleven years. The recipient of many research fellowships, including fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the American Antiquarian Society, he was honored with the EPA’s Henry David Thoreau Environmental Education Award in 1993. He died in 2006. Praise for The Poetry of William Carlos Williams of Rutherford “Generously quoting many of Williams’ best lines, tenderly confessing when he doesn’t understand Williams (e.g., Williams’ elusive variable foot), and referring to his own life and work to clarify what he thinks about Williams, Berry produces a work of aesthetics more than evaluation, of love more than critique.” —Booklist “Berry’s superb study reminds us that Williams remains our contemporary not only for the lively cadences and fresh imagery that animate his poems, but for the ethical imperative of his example: to know ourselves as creatures of a particular place and, through that grounded knowledge, to develop the arts that will enable us to live in it over the long haul.” —The Sewanee Review 978-1-61902-153-2 trade paper 5.5" × 8.25" 176 pages TRADE PAPER Marketing • National “Now in Paperback” campaign • Academic outreach for course adoption $15.95 literary criticism Territory: W april ALSO AVAILABLE BRINGING IT TO THE TABLE: ON FARMING AND FOOD Trade Paper • $14.95 978-1-58243-543-5 THE ART OF THE COMMONPLACE: THE AGRARIAN ESSAYS OF WENDELL BERRY Trade Paper • $15.95 978-1-59376-007-6 49 The Awful Grace of God Sex and Punishment Religious Terrorism, White Supremacy, and the Unsolved Murder of Martin Luther King Jr. Four Thousand Years of Judging Desire Stuart Wexler and Larry Hancock Eric Berkowitz “A step in the [right] direction of a better understanding of a national tragedy.” —Booklist now in paperback Marketing • National “Now in Paperback” campaign • Promotion through the author’s website: www.larry-hancock.com Of Note • Wexler’s research was published in Lamar Waldron’s Legacy of Secrecy • The authors’ work on the MLK assassination has been featured in The Boston Globe • Both coauthors are speaker chairmen and moderators for the annual November in Dallas conference The Awful Grace of God chronicles a multi-year effort to kill Martin Luther King Jr. by a group of the nation’s most violent right-wing extremists. Impeccably researched and thoroughly documented, this examines figures like Sam Bowers, head of the White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan of Mississippi, responsible for more than three hundred separate acts of violence in Mississippi alone; J.B. Stoner, who ran an organization that the California attorney general said was “more active and dangerous than any other ultra-right organization;” and Reverend Wesley Swift, a religious demagogue who inspired two generations of violent extremists. United in a holy cause to kill King, this network of racist militants was the likely culprit behind James Earl Ray and King’s assassination in Memphis on April 4, 1968. Wexler and Hancock have sifted through thousands of pages of declassified and never-before-released law enforcement files on the King murder, conducted dozens of interviews with figures of the period, and reexamined information from several recent cold case investigations. Their study reveals a terrorist network never before described in contemporary history. They have unearthed data that was unavailable to congressional investigators and used new datamining techniques to extend the investigation begun by the House Select Committee on Assassinations. The Awful Grace of God offers the most comprehensive and upto-date study of the King assassination and presents a road map for future investigation. Praise for The Awful Grace of God 978-1-61902-154-9 trade paper 6" × 9" 400 pages $18.95 history/true crime Territory: W april Larry Hancock graduated from the University of New Mexico with a triple major in anthropology, history, and education. He has worked on a variety of historical research projects, including November Patriots and Someone Would Have Talked. He lives in Oklahoma. Photos courtesy of the authors The “raging frenzy” of the sex drive, to use Plato’s phrase, has always defied control. However, that’s not to say that the Sumerians, Victorians, and every civilization in between and beyond have not tried, wielding their most formidable weapon: the law. At any given point in time, some forms of sex were condoned while others were punished mercilessly. Jump forward or backward a century or two (and often far less than that), and the harmless fun of one time period becomes the gravest crime in another. Sex and Punishment tells the story of the struggle throughout the millennia to regulate the most powerful engine of human behavior. Writer and lawyer Eric Berkowitz uses flesh-and-blood cases—much flesh and even more blood—to evoke the entire sweep of Western sex law, from the savage impalement of an ancient Mesopotamian adulteress to the imprisonment of Oscar Wilde in 1895 for “gross indecency.” The cast of Sex and Punishment is as varied as the forms taken by human desire itself: royal mistresses, gay charioteers, medieval transvestites, lonely goat-lovers, prostitutes of all stripes, London rent boys. Each of them had forbidden sex, and each was judged—and justice, as Berkowitz shows, rarely had much to do with it. With the light touch of a natural storyteller, Berkowitz spins these tales and more, going behind closed doors to reveal the essential history of human desire. “A timely study.” —Kirkus Stuart Wexler graduated from Tulane University with a degree in history. He now lives and teaches high school in New Jersey, where he won the prestigious James Madison Teachers’ Fellowship in 2010. 50 “[An] extraordinary book . . . I don’t think I’ve ever read such an entertaining historical work. It has the wisdom granted by perspective, without the condescension of someone who thinks we’re wiser than our ancestors.” —The Guardian 978-1-61902-155-6 Trade paper 6" × 9" 352 pages $17.95 sex/history/legal Territory: WE april now in paperback Marketing • National “Now in Paperback” campaign • Academic outreach to History, Law, and Gender Studies departments Of Note • This book grew out of an article Berkowitz wrote for the Los Angeles Times Magazine, which used intimate stories to illustrate larger themes of corruption in the California legal business • Berkowitz is currently at work on a sequel, which will cover the mid-nineteenth century through present-day Eric Berkowitz is a writer, lawyer, and journalist. He has a degree in print journalism from University of Southern California and has published in The Los Angeles Times and Weekly, and for the Associated Press. He was an editor of the West Coast’s premier daily legal publication, The Los Angeles Daily Journal. He lives in San Francisco. © Jennifer Berkowitz 51 Lonesome Animals A powerful debut about the hunt for a vicious killer in Washington state Bruce Holbert “Holbert has gone all-in: This book is audacious.” —Kirkus In Lonesome Animals, Russell Strawl, a tormented former lawman, is called out of retirement to hunt a serial killer with a sense of the macabre, who has been leaving elaborately carved bodies of Native Americans across three counties. As the pursuit ensues, Strawl’s own dark and violent history weaves itself into the hunt, shedding light on the remains of his broken family: one wife taken by the river, one by his own hand; an adopted Native American son who fancies himself a Catholic prophet; and a daughter, whose temerity and stoicism contrast against the romantic notions of how the West was won. In the vein of True Grit and Blood Meridian, Lonesome Animals is a western novel reinvented, and a detective story catered to the West. It contemplates the nature of story and heroism in the face of a collapsing ethos—not only of Native American culture, but also of the first wave of white men who, through the battle against the geography and its indigenous people, guaranteed their own destruction. But it is also about one man’s urgent, elegiac search for justice amidst the craven acts committed on the edges of civilization. Marketing • National “Now in Paperback” campaign • National radio and online campaigns Of Note • The main character is based on Holbert’s great-grandfather, Arthur Strahl • This received a starred review in Publishers Weekly Praise for Lonesome Animals “From the opening sentence of Holbert’s remarkable debut, it is obvious that we are in the hands of a master storyteller . . . Holbert’s prose is simultaneously roughly hewn and elegant, and recalls Cormac McCarthy at his best, as do his insights into the relationship between predator and prey. Call it literary fiction, classic western realism, or historical noir, Holbert is a writer of formidable skill and this auspicious debut should have considerable crossover appeal.” —Publishers Weekly (starred) 978-1-61902-156-3 trade paper 6" × 9" 272 pages $15.95 fiction Territory: W MAY “Lonesome Animals is exhilarating. The dialogue will blow your hair back, the description of land is prose poetry, and the violence is shocking for its intensity and sudden occurrence. This is a study of morality in a world that has lost its morals, a work that transcends its epic story of good versus evil. No character is spared and neither is the reader. Bruce Holbert’s fierce novel will enter the canon as a classic.” —Chris Offutt, author of Kentucky Straight “Lonesome Animals is dark, beautiful, compelling, strange, vivid; part western, part detective story, altogether brilliant. With the authority of myth, it is a book obsessed with justice and history, and its two main characters—the retired lawman Russell Strawl and his prophet son Elijah—are as harrowing and moving a marriage as I have read in years. It’s an incredible book by an incredible author. It will break your heart and leave you gasping.” —Elizabeth McCracken, author of The Giant’s House “Lonesome Animals is an impure marvel. This cowboy noir is loaded with lyrical detail, black humor, and a kind of antic despair. At its center is the compromised lawman Russell Strawl, a pilgrim making slow progress through the blasted ruins of Western myth. He turns violence into a kind of brutal music and provides the weary, stubborn heart of this astonishing debut.” —Max Phillips, Shamus-winning author of Fade to Blonde “Like much of Larry McMurtry’s work, which it resembles in some ways, Lonesome Animals is both a powerful story and an elegy for a disappearing era. The writing is nearly biblical in its stateliness, shot through with compressed, poetic description and its main figure’s sense of righteousness . . . a brilliant and utterly compelling debut.” —The Seattle Times “Holbert has a sweet touch with words and landscape, and there is a wealth of mood and mayhem.” —The Oregonian “A lyrical, almost poetic novel. Holbert vividly captures the essence of his characters and of the place that spawned them in Lonesome Animals.” —Mystery Maven blog “Lonesome Animals . . . breaks the bounds of genre and tosses them out the window . . . Descriptions are poetic, flawlessly simple, and evocative of a place I’m not even sure exists anymore . . . Holbert has succeeded in his attempt to write a big novel . . . this is the best book I’ve read this year.” —Tense Moments Bruce Holbert is a graduate of the University of Iowa Writers Workshop. His work has appeared in The Iowa Review, Hotel Amerika, Other Voices, The Antioch Review, Crab Creek Review, The West Wind Review, and Cairn. Bruce Holbert grew up at the foot of the Okanogan Mountains. His great-grandfather was an Indian scout and among the first settlers of the Grand Coulee. 52 Photo courtesy of the author 53 A Complicated Marriage The Capitalism Papers My Life With Clement Greenberg, A Wife’s Story Fatal Flaws of an Obsolete System Janice Van Horne JERRY MANDER A compelling look into Janice Van Horne’s life with legendary art critic Clement Greenberg now in paperback Marketing • National “Now in Paperback” campaign Of Note In 1955, Jenny Van Horne was a twenty-one-year-old, naïve Bennington College graduate on her own for the first time in New York City when she met forty-six-year-old Clement Greenberg who, she is told, is “the most famous, the most important, art critic in the world” and soon finds herself swept into his world and the heady company of Hans Hofmann, Willem de Kooning, Franz Kline, David Smith, and Helen Frankenthaler, among others. Seven months later, as a new bride, Jenny and Clem spend the summer in East Hampton near Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner, and she feels even more keenly like an interloper in the inner circle of the art scene. A woman disowned by her anti-Semitic family for marrying a Jew, she would develop a deep, loving bond with Clem that would remain strong through years of an open marriage and separate residences. Jenny embodies the pivotal changes of each passing decade as she searches for worlds of her own. She moves from the tradition of wife and mother to rebellion and experimentation, diving into psychoanalysis, the theater world of OOB and the Actors’ Studio, and succeeding in business. Throughout, A Complicated Marriage is grounded in honesty and the self-deprecating humor, grace, and appealing voice of its author. Praise for A Complicated Marriage • Van Horne was married to Clement Greenberg for forty years, and has been the executor of his estate since his death in 1994 “Janice Van Horne’s new memoir reveals a fresh perspective that sheds light on the interior life of Clement Greenberg, not only as the esteemed art critic but as a husband, lover, and off and on companion of nearly 40 years.” —The East Hampton Star 978-1-61902-157-0 trade paper 6" × 9" 352 pages $17.95 memoir Territory: USCO MAY In recent years, Janice Van Horne edited two books assembled from Clement Greenberg’s archive at the Getty Research Library: The Harold Letters and Homemade Esthetics, designated a New York Times Book of the Year. She lives in New York City, in the same apartment she and Clem moved into in 1960. 54 © Cynthia Hampton “A cogent rally cry and eloquent assessment of America’s—and the world’s—current predicament.” —Publishers Weekly In the manner of his bestseller Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television, Jerry Mander researches, discusses, and exposes a series of momentous and unsolvable environmental and social problems of capitalism. Mander argues that capitalism is no longer a viable system: “What may have worked in 1850 and 1900 is calamitous in 2010.” Capitalism, utterly dependent on never-ending economic growth, is an impossible absurdity on a finite planet with limited resources. Climate change, together with global food, water, and resource shortages, is only the start of the crises. A departure from most previous writings about capitalism, this book argues that certain problems of the capitalist system are intrinsic to its structure and cannot be reformed. They have now reached a point where they threaten the survival of the planet and all of human society. He makes the case that it’s now time to view the system as hopelessly obsolete and nonviable for the future. now in paperback Praise for The Capitalism Papers Marketing “This is a bold, much-needed book.” —Adam Hochschild, author of King Leopold’s Ghost • National “Now in Paperback” campaign “Mander has the courage to say that the emperor has no clothes; that the profit-obsessed economic system we are expected to swear loyalty to has its best days in its rear-view mirror. The implications are revolutionary.” —Robert McChesney, author of Rich Media, Poor Democracy “Point by point, Mander explains why capitalism can no longer serve people or the planet. And he leads us to a set of principles on which we can build a new economy for the 21st century and beyond.” —Anne Leonard, author of Story of Stuff 978-1-61902-158-7 trade paper 6" × 9" 304 pages Of Note • Mander’s Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television was a national bestseller • With over thirty-five years of work in antiglobalization and ecology movements, critiquing both global economic failures and realizing the intrinsic impacts of economic growth, few are as well qualified as Mander to discuss the flaws of capitalism $16.95 political science Territory: W MAY During the last three decades, Jerry Mander has been a leading activist and scholar in the anti-globalization movement, and was founder and is now Distinguished Fellow of the International Forum on Globalization. Among his other books are: In the Absence of the Sacred; Case Against the Global Economy (with Edward Goldsmith); and Paradigm Wars: Indigenous Peoples’ Resistance to Globalization (with Victoria Tauli-Corpuz). Mander has degrees in International Economics from the Wharton School of Business of the University of Pennsylvania, and from Columbia University Graduate Business School. © Koohan Paik 55 Watergate: The Hidden History Nixon, The Mafia, and The CIA Lamar Waldron While Richard Nixon’s culpability for Watergate has long been established—most recently by PBS in 2003—what’s truly remarkable is that after almost forty years, conventional accounts of the scandal still don’t address Nixon’s motive. Why was President Nixon willing to risk his reelection with so many repeated burglaries at the Watergate—and other Washington offices—in just a few weeks? What motivated Nixon to jeopardize his presidency by ordering the wide range of criminal operations that resulted in Watergate? What was Nixon so desperate to get at the Watergate, and how does it explain the deeper context surrounding his crimes? For the first time, the groundbreaking investigative research in Watergate: The Hidden History provides documented answers to all of these questions. It adds crucial missing pieces to the Watergate story—information that President Nixon wanted, but couldn’t get, and that wasn’t available to the Senate Watergate Committee or to Woodward and Bernstein. This new information not only reveals remarkable insights into Nixon’s motivation for Watergate, but also answers the two most important remaining questions: What were the Watergate burglars after? And why was Nixon willing to risk his presidency to get it? Watergate: The Hidden History reexamines the historical record, including new material only available in recent years. A groundbreaking investigation that finally documents what the Watergate burglars were really after—and why Nixon was willing to risk his presidency to get it Marketing • National “Now in Paperback” campaign • National radio campaign targeting shows at NPR and top 10 markets • Online promotion campaign Of Note • Legacy of Secrecy was optioned by Appian Way, Leonardo DiCaprio’s production company, and was greenlit by Warner Bros. for a 2013 release to coincide with the 50th anniversary of JFK’s assassination. Leonard DiCaprio will star as FBI informant Jack Van Laningham • This includes thousands of recently declassified CIA and FBI files, newly released Nixon tapes, and exclusive interviews with those involved in the events surrounding Watergate—ranging from former Nixon officials to key aides for John and Robert Kennedy • This contains for the first time in any book, the actual document the Watergate burglars were after, and the long-secret Senate Watergate Committee memos showing why the Mafia was central to the Watergate scandal Praise for Watergate: The Hidden History “One of the best investigative journalists in the United States . . . there are incredible revelations in this book.” —Liz Smith, Chicago Tribune “Waldron distills thousands of recently declassified CIA and FBI records as well as newly disclosed tapes of Richard Nixon, and he combines that information with his encyclopedic knowledge . . . to draw a new picture of the Watergate plumbers, their master and their motives.” —Ronald Goldfarb, former Justice Dept. Mafia Prosecutor, Washington Independent Review of Books “[Using] a surprising amount of new information, most of it from the National Archives, some released as recently as April 2012 . . . Waldron’s book shatters the common myths of Watergate [and he] not only documents what the burglars were looking for, but actually prints the entire file that the burglars and Nixon wanted so badly. The book also includes the first Watergate memos to ever officially link the Mafia to Watergate, [showing] how Nixon’s past ties to the Mafia triggered the Watergate break-ins.” —Thom Hartmann, radio and television host, Huffington Post Praise for Legacy of Secrecy “Explosive new material, based mainly on government documents from the National Archives.” —Vanity Fair 978-1-61902-162-4 trade paper 6" × 9" 816 pages 56 © Ashley Zeltzer $24.95 history/politics Territory: W June Lamar Waldron’s historical research and nonfiction books have won praise from Publishers Weekly, Vanity Fair, the Boston Globe, the San Francisco Chronicle, and major publications in Europe. His groundbreaking research has been the subject of two prime-time specials on the Discovery Channel, produced by NBC News. He has been featured on CNN, the History Channel, Geraldo Rivera, Fox News, and television specials in England, Germany, Japan, and Australia. Called “the ultimate JFK historian” by Variety, Waldron’s previous book is being produced as a major motion picture for Warner Brothers by Leonardo DiCaprio’s Appian Way. “Waldron and Hartmann offer convincing evidence . . . A riveting take on the assassination itself and the devastating results of government secrets, this account proves the continuing relevancy and importance of seeking the truth behind one of the US’s most personal tragedies.” —Publishers Weekly (starred) Also Available LEGACY OF SECRECY: THE LONG SHADOW OF THE JFK ASSASSINATION Trade Paper • $24.95 978-1-58243-535-0 Ultimate Sacrifice: John and Robert Kennedy, the Plan for a Coup in Cuba, and the murder of JFK Trade Paper • $24.95 978-1-58243-423-0 57 The Mountain and the Fathers Tracking Bodhidharma Growing Up in the Big Dry A Journey to the Heart of Chinese Culture Joe Wilkins now in paperback Marketing • National “Now in Paperback” campaign • Promotion through the author’s blog: www.joewilkins.org Of Note • Wilkins was the 2011 Obsidian Prize in Fiction winner and was a special mention for the Pushcart Prize as well as a finalist for the 2010 PEN Center USA and National Magazine awards Andy Ferguson A haunting exploration of male identity and the American West A captivating narrative of a journey to understand the deepest roots of Zen The Mountain and The Fathers explores the life of boys and men in the unforgiving, harsh world north of the Bull Mountains of eastern Montana in a drought afflicted area called the Big Dry, a land that chews up old and young alike. Joe Wilkins was born into this world, raised by a young mother and elderly grandfather following the untimely death of his father. That early loss stretches out across the Big Dry, and Wilkins uses his own story and those of the young boys and men growing up around him to examine the violence, confusion, and rural poverty found in this distinctly American landscape. Ultimately, these lives put forth a new examination of myth and manhood in the American West and cast a journalistic eye on how young men seek to transcend their surroundings in the search for a better life. Rather than dwell on grief or ruin, Wilkins’ memoir posits that it is our stories that sustain us, and The Mountain and The Fathers, much like the work of Norman Maclean or Jim Harrison, heralds the arrival of an instant literary classic. The life of Bodhidharma, the founder of Zen Buddhism, has, with the passing of time, been magnified to the scale of myth, turning history into the stuff of legend. Known as the First Patriarch, Bodhidharma brought Zen from South India into China in 500 CE, changing the country forever. In Tracking Bodhidharma, Andy Ferguson recreates the path of Bodhidharma, traveling through China to the places where the First Patriarch lived and taught. This sacred trail takes Ferguson deep into ancient China, and allows him to explore the origins of Chan (Zen) Buddhism, the cultural aftermath that Bodhidharma left in his wake, and the stories of a man who shaped a civilization. Tracking Bodhidharma offers a previously unheard perspective on the life of Zen’s most important religious leader, while simultaneously showing how that history is relevant to the rapidly developing superpower that is present-day China. By placing Zen Buddhism within the country’s political landscape, Ferguson presents the religion as a counterpoint to other Buddhist sects, a catalyst for some of the most revolutionary moments in China’s history, and as the ancient spiritual core of a country that is every day becoming more an emblem of the modern era. Praise for The Mountain and the Fathers “Joe Wilkins writes his truths straight from the broken heart of a broken land. When I read his personal stories, so lyrically and wondrously imagined, I feel a beautiful and sometimes terrifying emotion rise up in me—mythic, redemptive, and sustaining. If you want to read what matters, read this.” —Kim Barnes, author of In the Wilderness “Joe Wilkins’ sketches of life in Montana’s Big Dry country are filled with a potent combination of loving poetry and bitter nostalgia. You can smell the sage and wild onions and feel how this land apart forms and twists those who live there, and sometimes kills them. The Big Dry may care nothing for pilgrims and father seekers, but it marks its own as surely as a father marks a son.” —John N. Maclean 978-1-61902-161-7 trade paper 6" × 9" 240 pages $15.95 memoir Territory: WE june Joe Wilkins lives with his wife and two young children on the north Iowa prairie, where he teaches writing at Waldorf College. His poems, essays, and stories have appeared in The Georgia Review, The Southern Review, The Missouri Review, Harvard Review, Mid-American Review, Beloit Poetry Journal, The Sun, Orion, and Slate. 58 © Matt Knutson Praise for Tracking Bodhidharma “Ferguson’s book is as much about loss as it is about discovery.” —New York Times “Ferguson writes with a true storyteller’s voice, and as the author of Zen’s Chinese History and a fluent Chinese speaker, he has the chops to write about China.” — Original Mind Zen 978-1-61902-159-4 trade paper 6" × 9" 288 pages now in paperback Marketing • National “Now in Paperback” campaign • Promotion through the author’s website: www.southmountaintours.com Of Note • This will appeal to readers of Bill Porter’s Zen Baggage $17.95 zen/eastern religion Territory: W june Andy Ferguson is a graduate of the Chinese Language and Literature program at the University of Oregon. He has lived in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Japan, and has traveled extensively in East and Southeast Asia since 1978. He has organized and led numerous tours to visit Chinese Zen historical sites. He lives in Petaluma, California. Photo courtesy of the author 59 On Dupont Circle Franklin & Eleanor Roosevelt and the Progressives Who Shaped Our World James Srodes Prize-winning author James Srodes offers a vivid and scintillating portrait of the twelve young men and women who, on the eve of World War I, came together in Washington, D.C.’s tony Dupont Circle neighborhood. They were ambitious for personal and social advancement, and what bound them together was a sheer determination to remake America and the rest of the world in their progressive image. At one residence—known ironically as The House of Truth— lived Felix Frankfuter, a future Supreme Court justice, and Walter Lippman, later the most important political writer of the twentieth century. Another house served as the base for three siblings: John Foster Dulles, future secretary of state, Allen Dulles, one of the founders of the CIA, and sister Eleanor Lansing Dulles, one of the most important economists of the age. Meanwhile, nearby lived young Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt, who even then were rising political stars, William Bullitt, a charming and unscrupulous writer and future ambassador, and Herbert Hoover, already the most famous American in the world. The group mixed cocktails, foreign policy, and bedmates as they set out to remake the world. For the next twenty years they pursued increasingly important careers as their private lives became ever more entangled. By the end of this story, on the eve of World War II, the group came together again for a second chance at history—this time the result was the United Nations. 978-1-61902-165-5 trade paper 6" × 9" 288 pages An inside and sometimes scandalous portrait of the twelve young men and women who made up the famous Dupont Circle Set Marketing • National “Now in Paperback” campaign • National radio and online campaigns • Promotion through the author’s website: www.jamessrodes.com Of Note • Srodes is currently a regular commentator on financial news for the BBC Radio World Service, which is carried by many NPR stations around the country • Srodes has been on the Washington staffs of United Press International, Business Week, Forbes, and Financial World magazines, and has contributed to Newsweek, Institutional Investor, The London Sunday and Daily Telegraphs, and been featured on Larry King, Charlie Rose, Good Morning America, “Talk of the Nation,” and The Dianne Rheme Show $16.95 history Territory: WE July Praise for On Dupont Circle “A remarkable story . . . especially as told by Mr. Srodes, and written in a strong, clear prose, informed by a sense of history, a deep understanding of American politics, and a tolerance for human idiosyncracies.” —John R. Coyne, The Washington Times “One of the most fascinating tales I’ve read this year.” —Lewellyn King, host of the PBS show White House Chronicle Praise for Franklin: The Essential Founding Father “Srodes is a journalist who has previously written a prize-winning biography of Allen Dulles, and his gift to the familiar Franklin is an accessible style that will see readers to the last page. He is also well-read in English history, able to provide vivid anecdotes of Franklin’s life abroad. For those who last encountered Franklin in the eighth grade, one could do worse than to begin with Srodes’s book before returning to the autobiography, Franklin’s own account of the pluck and luck by which he and America came of age.” —Harper’s James Srodes is the author of Dream Maker: The Rise and Fall of John Z. DeLorean, Allen Dulles: Master of Spies, and Franklin: The Essential Founding Father. He lives in Washington, D.C. 60 © Franco Khoury 61 A Door in the Ocean The End of the Straight and Narrow A Memoir Stories David McGlynn David McGlynn “A rich, challenging, accomplished book.” —Ron Carlson The stories in The End of the Straight and Narrow take on the inner lives of the zealous, their passions and desires, and the ways religious faith is both the compass for navigating daily life and the force that makes ordinary life impossible. Ranging from the coastal highways of Southern California, to the mountains above Salt Lake City, to the swampy bayous and pine forests surrounding Houston, Texas, the stories often take place against the backdrop of disaster—a landslide, a fire, a drowning, a hurricane—as the characters question whether faith illuminates the world or leaves them isolated within it. Praise for David McGlynn TRADE PAPER Marketing • National print campaign • Author will be attending the AWP Of Note • This was the recipient of the 2008 Utah Book Award, was named an oustanding achievement by the Wisconsin Librarians’ Association 2008, and was a Finalist for the Independent Publisher Book Award for Literary Fiction in 2009 • McGlynn has contributed to a vast array of literary journals “When a young writer proves in a first collection that he is the real thing, when the stories are as riveting and haunting as David McGlynn’s are, the temptation is to ask how it is possible. McGlynn writes both elegantly and deeply about the trick of salvation and the strange consolation of suffering itself, about the sorrows of the faithful and the faith that’s required of the nonbeliever.” —Jane Hamilton “McGlynn’s superlatively crafted, deeply sympathetic debut story collection traces the spiritual agonies of Christians trying to make sense of their faith within the vicissitudes of human nature.” —Publishers Weekly “An exceptionally haunting collection. There is agony in these stories, and there is forgiveness and redemption. Here are everyday characters coping with what life has handed them. McGlynn is an author to watch; this is a collection to savor.” —ForeWord Reviews 978-1-61902-150-1 trade paper 5.5" × 8.25" 224 pages $14.95 short stories Territory: USC July “A stunningly heartfelt journey of one young man coming to terms with family and faith through loss, tragedy, and hardship.” —James Brown, author of The Los Angeles Diaries On a warm September night in 1991, in a quiet neighborhood north of Houston, Texas, David McGlynn’s closest friend and teammate on the high school swimming team is found murdered on his living room floor. As the crime goes unsolved and his friends turn to drugs and violence, McGlynn is vulnerable, searching for answers. He is drawn into the eccentric and often radical world of evangelical Christianity—a journey that leads him to a proselytizing campus fellowship, on a mission to Australia, and to Salt Lake City, where a second swimming–related tragedy leaves him doubting the authenticity of his beliefs. In his post–evangelical life, he finds himself exiled from his parents, plunged into financial chaos, and caught off–guard by the prospect of fatherhood. A new job offers hope for a new beginning, until the possibility of losing his newborn son forces him to confront the nature of everything he believes. A Door in the Ocean celebrates the author’s love for swimming, the enduring metaphor for his faith and the setting for many of his life’s momentous occasions, while it charts the violent origins of one young man’s faith and the struggle to find meaning in the midst of life’s painful uncertainties. Praise for A Door in the Ocean “Many of the key scenes in McGlynn’s striking new memoir take place at the beach or in swimming pools . . . Ocean swimming, in particular, transports McGlynn to another realm, and he does a terrific job of dramatizing the allure of solitary swims in open water . . . McGlynn’s writing is alive with an insider’s knowledge of the power and comforts—and, yes, sometimes delusions—offered by collective radical belief. In a larger sense, this is a compelling coming-of-age story, one marked by random tragedy and biblical tracts, bad church coffee, and chlorine.” —Maureen Corrigan, NPR 978-1-61902-163-1 trade paper 6" × 9" 288 pages now in paperback Marketing • National “Now in Paperback” campaign • Promotion through the author’s website: www.david-mcglynn.com Of Note • The book’s final chapter was selected for The Best American Sports Writing 2009 and was nominated for a Pushcart Prize $16.95 memoir Territory: USC july The End of the Straight and Narrow won the 2008 Utah Book Award and was named an outstanding achievement by the Wisconsin Library Association. David McGlynn teaches at Lawrence University in Wisconsin, where he lives with his wife and sons. He is also the author of a memoir, A Door in the Ocean, which NPR called “a compelling coming of age story.” 62 © Stacy Young 63 What It Means to Be Human Mother & Child Historical Reflections from 1791 to the Present A Novel Joanna Bourke Carole Maso “This plotless but not directionless novel beautifully contemplates the treachery of the world that motherhood exposes, and the child’s ignorance of it.” —Publishers Weekly now in paperback Marketing • National “Now in Paperback” campaign • Promotion through the author’s website: www.carolemaso.com Of Note • Maso has won an NEA fellowship, a Lannan Literary Award, and the Rose Prize, among others ALSO AVAILABLE THE Room Lit by Roses Trade Paper · $14.95 978-1-58243-212-0 A mediation on life and death, being and non-being, and the intense mystery and beauty of existence, Maso’s new novel follows a mother and child as they roam through wondrous and increasingly dangerous psychic and physical terrain A great wind comes, an ancient tree splits in half, and a bat, or is it an angel, enters the house where the mother and child sleep, and in an instant a world of relentless change, of spectacular consequences, of submerged memory and uncanny intimations is set into motion. It is as if a veil has lifted, and what was once hidden is now in plain sight in all its splendor and terror as the mother and child are asked to bear enormous transformations and a terrible wisdom almost impossible to fathom. As the outside can no longer be separated from the inside, nor dream from reality, the mother and child continue, encountering along the way all kinds of characters and creatures as they move through a surreal world of grace and dread to the end. The bond between mother and child is untouchable, unrealizable until it is lost, and this meditation pushes the envelope, inching ever closer to touching it, to realizing it. Praise for The Art Lover “The tough-mindedness, originality and wit of her perceptions are intoxicating.” —Publishers Weekly “By giving the conflicts in her life a fictional context, she tries to bring order and beauty—and some degree of understanding—to chaos.” —Library Journal 978-1-61902-164-8 trade paper 6" × 9" 320 pages $16.95 fiction Territory: USCO july Carole Maso is the author of seven award-winning books including The Art Lover, Ghost Dance, and Break Every Rule. She is a professor of English at Brown University. 64 © Helen Lang A provocative exploration of the blurred line between humans and animals In this fascinating account, Joanna Bourke addresses the profound question of what it means to be “human” rather than “animal.” How are people excluded from political personhood? How does one become entitled to rights? The distinction between the two concepts is a blurred line, permanently under construction. If the Earnest Englishwoman had been capable of looking one hundred years into the future, she might have wondered about the human status of chimeras, or the ethics of stem cell research. Political disclosures and scientific advances have been relocating the humananimal border at an alarming speed. In this meticulously researched, illuminating book, Bourke explores the legacy of more than two centuries, and looks forward into what the future might hold for humans, women, and animals. Praise for What It Means to Be Human “Avoiding the impenetrable prose often found in academic books, this deeply scholarly work is lively and challenging in equal measure, and rewarding throughout.” —The Boston Globe Praise for Rape: Sex, Violence, History now in paperback Marketing “[A] provocative, well-argued exploration.” —Publishers Weekly • National “Now in Paperback” campaign “Thought-provoking at every turn.” —The Independent (London) • Promotion through the author’s website: www.bbk.ac.uk/history/jb Praise for Fear: A Cultural History “Imaginative social, psychological and cultural history . . . Bourke performs sterling service, painstakingly picking over usually bypassed sources and materials for hidden clues as to what scares us.” —Publishers Weekly 978-1-61902-167-9 trade paper 6" × 9" 448 pages $22.95 history Territory: USCO AUGUST • Outreach to universities for course adoption • Outreach to history and feminist bookclubs Of Note • Bourke is an active contributor to radio, journalism, and television, and has won numerous awards for her audio productions and writing • Bourke’s previous books, Rape and Fear, were both published by Counterpoint • Includes black-and-white illustrations Joanna Bourke is a professor of history at Birkbeck, University of London and an active contributor to radio, journalism, and television. She is the author of several books, including Rape: Sex, Violence, History and Fear: A Cultural History, which was shortlisted for Mind Book of the Year in 2006. She lives in London. © Mark Mitchell/NZ Herald 65 Featured Agricultural Titles from Counterpoint No Footprints A Darcy Lott Mystery Empires of Food Feast, Famine, and the Rise and Fall of Civilizations EVAN D.G. FRASER AND ANDREW RIMAS Susan Dunlap Darcy Lott returns in the fifth installment of this beloved mystery series. now in paperback Marketing What is death? Darcy Lott asks her Zen teacher, Garson-roshi. While scouting a location site on the Golden Gate Bridge, stunt double Darcy Lott sees a woman about to jump. The woman fights, but Darcy manages to pull her back. Before disappearing, the woman tells Darcy that by Thanksgiving she’ll be dead. Darcy has four days to find her and keep her from killing herself, but she has no idea who she is. Darcy tracks her to a dodgy San Francisco neighborhood, where she uncovers more perplexing facts. The woman ran a copy shop operating as a front for “the cockroach,” the shady police boss of the neighborhood, lived in a cheap apartment above a bagpipe player, and spent very little money except on an expensive racing bike the week before. Meanwhile, there are problems with the movie production. One of the producers, Macomber Dale, gets their permit revoked, causing them to redo an entire set-up, and then drives the stunt car off the Berkeley pier. The search leads Darcy to the last place a woman would ever bike to: the Top of the Mark on Nob Hill, to a swank charity reception at City Hall and finally to a place more terrifying than the cold Pacific. • National “Now in Paperback” campaign Praise for No Footprints Of Note “White-knuckle plot and bare-knuckled action scenes.” —The New York Times Book Review • Dunlap has won Anthony and Macavity mystery awards and was president of Sisters in Crime, a worldwide organization for women writing mysteries • The Darcy Lott series has sold more than 12,000 copies to date “As long as writers like Dunlap continue to play with the form, genre fans need not lament the mystery’s demise.” —The San Francisco Chronicle “Dunlap knows the West Coast, knows how to create memorable characters, knows how to build suspense, and her technical expertise is extraordinary.” — Chicago Tribune “Susan Dunlap is one of the best!” —The San Diego Union Tribune 978-1-61902-166-2 trade paper 6" × 9" 272 pages $14.95 mystery Territory: W augustw Susan Dunlap is the author of a collection of short stories and twenty-three novels, including the other Darcy Lott mysteries, Civil Twilight, Hungry Ghosts, A Single Eye and Power Slide. She has won Anthony and Macavity awards and has been president of Sisters in Crime. She and her husband live near San Francisco. Using the colorful diaries of a sixteenth-century merchant as a narrative guide, Empires of Food vividly chronicles the fate of people and societies for the past 12,000 years through the foods they grew, hunted, traded, and ate—and offers fascinating, and devastating, insights into what to expect in years to come. In energetic prose, agricultural expert Evan D.G. Fraser and journalist Andrew Rimas capture the flavor of places as disparate as ancient Mesopotamia and imperial Britain, taking us from the first city in the once-thriving Fertile Crescent to today’s overworked breadbaskets and rice bowls in the United States and China. 978-1-58243-793-4 | TRADE PAPER | $16.95 Nature as Measure The Selected Essays of Wes Jackson WES JACKSON, INTRODUCTION BY WENDELL BERRY A collection of Jackson’s essays from Altars of Unhewn Stone and Becoming Native to This Place, these ideas of land conservation and education are written from the point of view of a man who has practiced what he’s preached and proven that it is possible to partially restore much of the land that we’ve ravaged. Wes Jackson lays the foundation for a new farming economy, grounded in nature’s principles and located in dying small towns and rural communities. Exploding the tenets of industrial agriculture, Jackson seeks to integrate food production with nature in a way that sustains both. 978-1-58243-700-2 | TRADE PAPER | $16.95 Consulting the Genius of the Place An Ecological Approach to a New Agriculture WES JACKSON Locavore leaders such as Alice Waters, Michael Pollan, and Barbara Kingsolver all speak of the need for sweeping changes in how we get our food. A longtime leader of this movement is Wes Jackson, who for decades has taken it upon himself to speak for the land, to speak for the soil itself. Here, he offers a manifesto toward a conceptual revolution: Jackson asks us to look to natural ecosystems—or, if one prefers, nature in general—as the measure against which we judge all of our agricultural practices. 978-1-58243-780-4 | TRADE PAPER | $16.95 Cultivating an Ecological Conscience Essays from a Farmer Philosopher FREDERICK KIRSCHENMANN, EDITED BY CONSTANCE L. FALK Cultivating an Ecological Conscience follows Kirschenmann’s personal and professional evolution as a lifelong proponent of new agrarianism. Together with agricultural economist Constance L. Falk, Kirschenmann has compiled a collection of his essential writings on farming, philosophy, and sustainability. In this fascinating blend of personal history, philosophical discourse, spiritual ruminations, and practical advice, Kirschenmann shares candid, valuable insights about the agricultural challenges facing the modern world and the necessity of achieving ecologically sound and responsible stewardship of the land. 978-1-58243-752-1 | TRADE PAPER | $18.95 66 © Sally Powers 67 Winter 2013 Highlights A Town of Empty Rooms A Novel KAREN E. BENDER The long awaited, much anticipated new novel by the author of Like Normal People January | 978-1-61902-069-6 | CLOTH | $25.00 Winter 2013 Highlights The Grammarian A Novel ANNAPURNA POTLURI A sweeping tale of unrequited love set against the historical and political Indian landscape February | 978-1-61902-102-0 | CLOTH | $24.00 A Secret History of Torture IAN COBAIN A searing look into the secret world of torture January | 978-1-61902-109-9 | CLOTH | $26.00 Falling Cars and Junkyard Dogs JAY FARRAR A revered musician reveals his musical and personal heritage in this impressionistic memoir March | 978-1-59376-512-5 | TRADE PAPER | $18.95 An Intimate Life Sex, Love, and My Journey as a Surrogate Partner CHERYL T. COHEN GREENE with LORNA GARANO “Cheryl Cohen Greene’s book allows us to share in her beautiful work. We read about sexual healing and we are healed ourselves. Give yourself the gift of reading this book and getting a glimpse of what is possible.” —Helen Hunt The Forest House A Year’s Journey into the Landscape of Love, Loss, and Starting Over JOELLE FRASER Fraser uses her gifts to explore the landscapes—both internal and external—of her post-marriage, single mother life March | 978-1-61902-113-6 | TRADE PAPER | $16.95 january | 978-1-59376-506-4 | TRADE PAPER | $15.95 The Esperanza Fire Arson, Murder, and the Agony of Engine 57 JOHN N. MACLEAN “It was a cauldron of fire. There was a solid churning, as though someone had laid down a flamethrower in the canyon.” February | 978-1-61902-071-9 | CLOTH | $26.00 Fight Song A Novel JOSHUA MOHR The brilliant and satirical new novel by the author of the critically acclaimed Damascus February | 978-1-59376-508-8 | TRADE PAPER | $15.95 68 Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of Psycho STEPHEN REBELLO Tying in with a major motion picture starring Sir Anthony Hopkins and Dame Helen Mirren, a tell-all documenting the making of Psycho, the forerunner of all psychothrillers JANUARY | 978-1-59376-511-8 | $16.95 Johns, Marks, Tricks, and Chickenhawks Professionals & Their Clients Writing About Each Other EDITED BY DAVID HENRY STERRY & RICHARD MARTIN JR. A follow-up to the critically acclaimed Hos, Hookers, Call Girls, and Rent Boys, this sheds light on the world of sex work March | 978-1-59376-507-1 | TRADE PAPER | $16.95 69 Current & Selling Salt to Summit A Vagabond Journey from Death Valley to Mount Whitney DANIEL ARNOLD “Arnold’s whimsy and determination turn the journey into part meditation, part history lesson, all told in evocative language.” —Publishers Weekly Current & Selling At Dawn JOBIE HUGHES “Hughes combines coming-of-age tale, portrait of the artist as a young man, and father-son saga in a well-crafted novel.” —Publishers Weekly 978-1-59376-449-4 | TRADE PAPER | $15.95 978-1-58243-750-7 | TRADE PAPER | $17.95 Cataract Some Notes After Having a Cataract Removed JOHN BERGER WITH DRAWINGS BY SELCUK DEMIREL Notes and reflections by one of our great soothsayers on the minor miracle of cataract surgery 978-1-61902-063-4 | CLOTH | $22.00 White Fever A Journey to the Frozen Heart of Siberia JACEK HUGO-BADER A lone journey by jeep (and occasionally kayak) across one of the world’s most inhospitable and surreal landscapes, White Fever is an unparalled insight into Siberian life 978-1-61902-011-5 | TRADE PAPER | $16.95 It All Turns on Affection The Jefferson Lecture and Other Essays WENDELL BERRY “Imagination enables sympathy, sympathy enables affection. And in affection we find the possibility of neighborly, kind, conserving economy.” —Wendell Berry 978-1-61902-114-3 | TRADE PAPER | $14.95 Elsewhere, California A Novel DANA JOHNSON “In this debut novel, Johnson brilliantly knits the dual narratives together, maintaining a dynamic balance between nimble language and rowdy, vulnerable characters. The real achievement is the honest, compassionate, and unflinching willingness to honor teenage struggles for identity, confidence, and love while listening to Led Zeppelin and rooting for the Dodgers.” —Publishers Weekly (starred) 978-1-58243-784-2 | TRADE PAPER | $15.95 A Place in Time Twenty Stories of the Port William Membership WENDELL BERRY “Wendell Berry has constructed an almost perfect fiction, a sublime meditation on how irrevocable loss is redeemed through a renewed sense of kinship with the land and the past.” —The Washington Post Theft A Novel BK LOREN “Loren’s careful, direct prose reflects the still gaze of the martial arts expert.” —Publishers Weekly 978-1-58243-819-1 | TRADE PAPER | $16.00 978-1-61902-049-8 | CLOTH | $26.00 Art of the Dead EDITED BY PHILip CUSHWAY A celebration of the artists and art of the American Rock Poster Movement through the Grateful Dead’s rich graphic legacy 978-1-59376-502-6 | CLOTH | $45.00 From the Forest A Search for the Hidden Roots of Our Fairytales SARA MAITLAND “In this lovely, inventive book, Maitland (A Book of Silence) pursues the psychic juncture between forests and fairy tales. This may sound maudlin or overly fanciful, but the author’s research is diligent, her analytical skills sharp, and her prose lean and compelling.” —Publishers Weekly 978-1-61902-014-6 | CLOTH | $28.00 70 71 Current & Selling The Bird That Swallowed Its Cage The Selected Writings of Curzio Malaparte ADAPTED AND TRANSLATED BY WALTER MURCH From the Academy Award-winning film editor, a gorgeous translation of Curzio Malaparte’s remarkable works 978-1-61902-061-0 | CLOTH | $25.00 Accabadora A Novel MICHELA MURGIA, TRANSLATED BY SILVESTER MAZZARELLA “Set in 1950s Sardinia, Murgia’s lovely English-language debut . . . [is] a touching meditation on life and death and the power of love to bind, transcend, and let go.” —Publishers Weekly Current & Selling Looking for Transwonderland Travels in Nigeria NOO SARO-WIWA “The author allows her love-hate relationship with Nigeria to flavor this thoughtful travel journal, lending it irony, wit, and frankness.” —Kirkus 978-1-61902-007-8 | TRADE PAPER | $15.95 Jesus Land A Memoir JULIA SCHEERES “A page turner . . . heart-stopping and enraging . . . focused, justified, and without a trace of self-pity. Shot through with poignancy.” —The New York Times Book Review 978-1-61902-065-8 | TRADE PAPER | $15.95 978-1-61902-050-4 | TRADE PAPER | $15.95 The Constant Heart CRAIG NOVA “An evocative family yarn . . . Nova has again produced expertly drawn characters and carefully measured, suspenseful prose with some surprises, all with undertones orbiting around Einstein’s cosmological constant theory of relativity.” —Publishers Weekly (starred) Two-Part Inventions A Novel LYNNE SHARON SCHWARTZ A brilliant and compelling novel about what happens when the life you created was built on deception, loosely based on a true story 978-1-61902-015-3 | CLOTH | $25.00 978-1-61902-023-8 | CLOTH | $25.00 The Salt God’s Daughter ILIE RUBY “Ruby’s second novel (after The Language of Trees) imbues the complex relationships between mothers and daughters with legends and feminist mysticism . . . Ruby’s writing is elegant and insightful.” —Publishers Weekly 978-1-61902-002-3 | CLOTH | $25.00 An Absorbing Errand How Artists and Craftsmen Make Their Way to Mastery JANNA MALAMUD SMITH “Making art often requires ruthlessness, too; and the remembrance of and reenactment of shame; and the avoiding of friends and even family. Janna Smith both warns and reassures us as she explores these difficult truths with compassion and wit.” —Edith Pearlman 978-1-61902-004-7 | CLOTH | $25.00 Sea Monkeys A Memory Book KRIS SAKNUSSEMM “It’s immediately evident that we’re dealing with a poet who’s operating in a sublimely blurred space between poetry and prose . . . The autobiographical sketches that cover the author’s early adult years are full of the sort of boozing, drugging and sexcapades one would naturally expect from an alcoholic preacher’s son . . . A wonderfully warped grab bag of memories from a wilder and weirder time.” —Kirkus 72 978-1-59376-448-7 | TRADE PAPER | $15.95 1912 The Year the World Discovered Antarctica CHRIS TURNEY A riveting look into the year that expanded the known world and marked the beginning of the end for traditional exploration 978-1-58243-789-7 | CLOTH | $27.00 73 Backlist Highlights COMPLICATION Backlist Highlights MINIATURES OF A ZEN MASTER SEASONS WITH ALLEN 978-1-59376-432-6 978-1-58243-536-7 GORDON BALL $15.95 $14.95 A Novel ISAAC ADAMSON TRADE PAPER ROBERT AITKEN TRADE PAPER EAST HILL FARM COCAINE NIGHTS LOST SON IRREPRESSIBLE THIS RIVER THE RADICAL IMPACT OF HERMANN BROCH’S THE LIFE AND TIMES A MEMOIR TRADE PAPER 1611–2011 1925–1928 LESLIE BRODY 978-1-58243-721-7 978-1-61902-010-8 TRANSLATED BY JOHN TRADE PAPER $14.95 ON EXTINCTION 1616 GINSBERG 978-1-58243-570-1 978-1-61902-017-7 $15.95 TRADE PAPER THE BOOK OF BOOKS J. G. BALLARD $16.95 THE KING JAMES BIBLE MELVyN BRAGG TRADE PAPER $16.95 LETTERS TO HIS SON, OF JESSICA MITFORD HERMANN BROCH 978-1-58243-767-5 HARGRAVES $18.95 978-1-58243-747-7 JAMES BROWN TRADE PAPER . CLOTH $26.00 MADONNA AND ME WOMEN WRITERS ON THE QUEEN OF POP SELECTED AND EDITED BY LAURA BARCELLA FOREWORD BY JESSICA VALENTI 978-1-59376-429-6 EVERY THIRD THOUGHT A NOVEL IN FIVE SEASONS JOHN BARTH 978-1-61902-012-2 TRADE PAPER $15.95 HANNAH COULTER A NOVEL GINA BERRIAULT 978-1-59376-078-6 GARDNER $14.95 OF GINA BERRIAULT EDITED BY LEONARD WENDELL BERRY TRADE PAPER 978-1-58243-740-8 TRADE PAPER IMAGINATION IN PLACE A NOVEL Dispatches from A NOVEL 978-1-58243-706-4 978-1-58243-160-4 Roy Blount Jr. 978-1-59376-501-9 WENDELL BERRY TRADE PAPER $14.95 WENDELL BERRY TRADE PAPER $15.95 Long Time Leaving Up South 978-1-58243-458-2 Trade Paper $15.95 A Novel HOW WE BECAME CREATIVE INTIMACY 978-1-59376-191-2 NATURE 978-1-61902-067-2 978-1-61902-100-6 $14.95 978-1-61902-018-4 $29.95 FIVE STORIES OF DANIEL BULLEN Black Flies Shannon Burke Trade Paper $16.95 $15.95 JAYBER CROW THE LOVE LIVES OF THE ARTISTS TRADE PAPER TRADE PAPER $16.95 74 STOLEN PLEASURES SELECTED STORIES LIGHTNING PEOPLE MELANIE CHALLENGER CLOTH THE INSIDER’S GUIDE TO THE POLITICS OF SEX IN Interviewed by David ALEX “AXLES OF EVIL” NANCY L. COHEN NOAM CHOMSKY TRADE PAPER Barsamian, Edited by Arthur Naiman 978-1-59376-427-2 TRADE PAPER $18.00 THE WORLD IN MOTION THOMAS CHRISTIeNSEN TRADE PAPER $28.00 HOW THE WORLD WORKS CHRISTOPHER BOLLEN $15.95 ESTRANGED FROM DOWN AND DERBY ROLLER DERBY DELIRIUM THE SHOOTING PARTY AMERICA A NOVEL COHEN AND JENNIFER 978-1-61902-068-9 978-1-58243-593-0 978-1-59376-274-2 $16.95 $14.95 “KASEY BOMBER” BARBEE TRADE PAPER $15.95 TRADE PAPER ISABEL COLEGATE TRADE PAPER 75 Backlist Highlights MRS. BRIDGE A NOVEL SLEEPING WHERE I FALL DOGEN’S GENJO KOAN POEMS AND SONGS EIHEI DOGEN 978-1-59376-504-0 TRADE PAPER $14.95 EVAN S. CONNELL A CHRONICLE THREE COMMENTARIES TRADE PAPER 978-1-58243-496-4 978-1-58243-827-6 $22.95 $16.95 THE ECOLOGY OF WISDOM OF PLAYBOYS, PIGS, AND EDITED BY ALAN AMERICAN TALE OF SEX 978-1-58243-568-8 $14.95 THE SUITCASE SERGEI DOVLATOV PETER COYOTE TRADE PAPER DIRTY! DIRTY! DIRTY! SLANKY JOY OF MAN’S DESIRING AN ANTHOLOGY OF EMMA STIRKING IT RICH A Novel JEAN GIONO EARTH CHARLOTTE GRAY 978-1-58243-814-6 TRADE PAPER $24.00 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF MIKE DOUGHTY A NOVEL TRADE PAPER 978-1-58243-565-7 All About Lulu TRADE PAPER $15.95 DEEPLY ROOTED Jonathan Evison UNCONVENTIONAL Trade Paper OF AGRIBUSINESS $14.95 DRENGSON AND AND WONDER $16.95 978-1-58243-592-3 978-1-59376-284-1 $16.95 $15.95 Swallow the Ocean FEAST, FAMINE, AND A NOVEL SIX PLANTS THAT Laura M. Flynn CIVILIZATIONS 978-1-59376-446-3 HENRY HOBHOUSE ANDREW RIMAS $16.95 TRADE PAPER COLD FRONT CONFLICT AHEAD IN ARCTIC WATERS A Memoir 978-1-61902-058-0 978-1-58243-461-2 $16.95 $15.95 DAVID FAIRHALL TRADE PAPER Trade Paper EMPIRES OF FOOD THE RISE AND FALL OF EVAN D.G. FRASER AND 978-1-58243-793-4 TRADE PAPER $16.95 KEYHOLE FACTORY WILLIAM GILLESPIE TRADE PAPER TRADE PAPER $18.95 Love All the People SLINGSHOT TO THE JUGGERNAUT $22.95 SANDER HICKS Hicks 978-1-59376-423-4 978-1-58243-586-2 978-1-59376-201-8 $15.95 $15.95 $16.95 SEEDS OF CHANGE THE LONGEST WINTER A NOVEL MEREDITH HOOPER 978-1-58243-609-8 TRADE PAPER $15.95 TRADE PAPER TRADE PAPER IN THE KLONDIKE 978-1-58243-765-1 Bill Hicks 978-1-59376-196-7 GOLD DIGGERS PETER GLASSGOLD 978-1-61902-021-7 LISA M. HAMILTON PENTHOUSE PAUPERS—AN MIKE EDISON GOLDMAN’S MOTHER The Essential Bill WRITINGS BY ARNE NAESS BILL DEVALL ANARCHY! FARMERS IN THE AGE 978-1-58243-733-0 Trade Paper 76 Backlist Highlights Trade Paper TRANSFORMED MANKIND SCOTT’S OTHER HEROES 978-1-59376-049-6 978-1-61902-013-9 $19.95 $16.95 TRADE PAPER TRADE PAPER THE EDEN HUNTER THE MESSENGER YANNICK HAENEL CLOTH JUBILEE HITCHHIKER RICHARD BRAUTIGAN WILLIAM HJORTSBERG 978-61902-105-1 TRADE PAPER $29.95 THE STATUES THAT WALKED SKIP HORACK UNRAVELING THE TRADE PAPER ISLAND MYSTERY OF EASTER TERRY HUNT & CARL LIPO 978-1-61902-020-7 TRADE PAPER $16.95 77 Backlist Highlights HANDMAKING AMERICA A BACK-TO-BASICS PATHWAY TO A REVITALIZED AMERICAN DEMOCRACY BILL IVEY 978-1-61902-053-5 TRADE PAPER $16.95 MISTAKEN CONSULTING THE GENIUS OF the PLACE 978-1-58243-737-8 APPROACH TO A NEW $24.95 AN ECOLOGICAL AGRICULTURE TRADE PAPER A LOVESONG FOR INDIA JONATHAN LETHEM 978-1-61902-104-4 BY SEAN HOWE 978-1-59376-436-4 978-1-59376-278-0 $15.95 RUTH PRAWER JHABVALA TRADE PAPER $16.95 THEY LIVE SERIES EDITED DEEP FOCUS SERIES MEMOIRS OF A PORCUPINE ALAIN MABANCKOU TRADE PAPER TRADE PAPER 978-1-58243-780-4 THE OFFICIAL BOOK OF SEX, DRUGS, AND ROCK ’N’ ROLL LISTS 978-1-58243-613-5 978-1-59376-445-6 $15.95 JUDY MACGUIRE TRADE PAPER The Old Capital J. Martin Holman EVERY NIGHT’S A SATURDAY NIGHT APPETITES Why Women Want A new translation by THE ROCK ‘N’ ROLL LIFE CAROLINE KNAPP 978-1-59376-032-8 BOBBY KEYS CALDWELL Trade paper $15.95 OF LEGENDARY SAX MAN A THEORY OF SMALL EARTHQUAKES $16.95 $15.95 BY KEITH RICHARDS $14.95 TRADE PAPER TRADE PAPER PETER MURYO WOMEN $15.00 978-1-58243-808-5 SPACE AND TIME MATTHIESSEN AND PETER CUNNINGHAM 978-1-58243-630-2 TRADE PAPER $29.95 TRADE PAPER $15.95 THE BREAK OF NOON JOE JONES a play A NOVEL NEIL L a BUTE ANNE LAMOTT I JUST HITCHED IN FROM THE COAST $13.95 978-1-58243-533-6 $16.95 $14.95 STEPHEN KOCH PAUL KRASSNER $13.95 $14.00 978-1-58243-798-9 TRADE PAPER $15.95 978-1-59376-503-3 TRADE PAPER $18.95 TRADE PAPER TRADE PAPER $15.95 978-1-58243-732-3 READER Trade Paper MATTU 978-1-59376-428-9 978-1-58243-758-3 978-1-59376-003-8 COUNTERCULTURE MAZNAVI and AYESHA 978-1-93336-836-8 978-1-59376-285-8 ED McCLANAHAN TRADE PAPER A MEMORIAL W. S. 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FISHER ANNE ZIMMERMAN BURTON GOLDBERG 978-1-59376-299-5 978-1-58243-804-7 TRADE PAPER $24.95 $16.95 978-1-59376-500-2 $19.95 TRADE PAPER TRADE PAPER 83 Index 1616, 75 1912, 73 Absorbing Errand, An, 73 Accabadora, 72 Adamson, Isaac, 74 Adjustment, The, 21 Age of Persuasion, The, 80 Aitken, Robert, 74 All About Lulu, 76 All the Dead Yale Men, 16–17 All the Men Are Sleeping, 13 An Apple a Day, 38–39 Anarchy!, 77 Andes, 78 Appetites, 78 Approaching the Future, 35 Apricot Jam and Other Stories, 82 Architecture of the Novel, 5 Are We There Yet?, 79 Arnold, Daniel, 70 Art of the Commonplace, The, 49 Art of the Dead, 70 At Dawn, 71 Awful Grace of God, The, 50 Bader, Jacek Hugo, 71 Ball, Gordon, 74 Ballard, J. G., 74 Barbee, Jennifer, 75 Barcella, Laura, 74 Barsamian, David, 75 Barth, John, 74 Bender, Karen E., 68 Berger, John, 70 Berkowitz, Eric, 51 Berriault, Gina, 74 Berry, Wendell, 46–47, 49, 67, 70, 74 Between My Father and the King, 14 Bhattacharya, Sanjiv, 34 Bird That Swallowed Its Cage, The, 72 Black Cool, 83 Black Flies, 75 Bley, Liza, 44 Blount, Roy Jr., 74 Bollen, Christopher, 74 Bombshell, 42 Bone Rattler, 29 Book of Books, The, 75 Book of Silence, A, 79 Bottoms, Greg, 6 Bourke, Joanna, 65 Bragg, Melvyn, 75 Break of Noon, The, 78 Breaking Point, The, 78 Bring the Noise, 81 Bringing It to the Table, 49 Broch, Hermann, 75 Brody, Leslie, 75 Brown, James, 75 Bullen, Daniel, 75 Burke, Shannon, 75 Calderon, Graciela, 81 Caldwell, Gail, 78 84 Index Capitalism Papers, The, 55 Carrier, Scott, 7 Cascadia’s Fault, 82 Cassada, 81 Castaways of the Image Planet, 22 Cataract, 70 Challenger, Melanie, 75 Chomsky, Noam, 75 Christiensen, Thomas, 75 Cobain, Ian, 68 Cocaine Nights, 74 Cohen Greene, Cheryl T., 68 Cohen, Alex, 75 Cohen, Nancy L., 75 Cold Earth, 15 Cold Front, 76 Cold Mountain Poems, 8 Colegate, Isabel, 75 Complicated Kindness, A, 82 Complicated Marriage, A, 54 Complication, 74 Confessions of a Raving, Unconfined Nut, 78 Connell, Evan S., 76 Constant Heart, The, 17, 72 Consulting the Genius of the Place, 67, 78 Country of Marriage, The, 47 Coyote, Peter, 76 Crises of Capitalism, The, 81 Cultivating an Ecological Conscience, 67 Cunningham, Peter, 79 Curb Service, 43 Cushway, Philip, 70 Daly, Linda, 10–11 Davenport, Guy, 18 Dean, Bradley P., 48 Deeply Rooted, 77 Delirium, 75 Demirel, Selcuk, 70 Devall, Bill, 76 Dirty! Dirty! Dirty!, 76 Ditenhafer, Bill, 78 Dogen, Eihei, 76 Dogen’s Genjo Koan, 76 Door in the Ocean, A, 63 Doughty, Mike, 76 Dovlatov, Sergei, 76 Down Among Dead Men, 83 Down and Derby, 75 Drengson, Alan, 76 Dunlap, Susan, 66 East Hill Farm, 74 Ebenkamp, Paul, 82, 83 Ecology of Wisdom, The, 76 Eden Hunter, The, 77 Edison, Mike, 76 Egerton, Owen, 31 Elsewhere, California, 71 Empires of Food, 67, 76 End of the Straight and Narrow, The, 62 Esperanza Fire, The, 68 Ethical Butcher, The, 32 Etiquette of Freedom, The, 82 Every Night’s a Saturday Night, 78 Every Third Thought, 74 Everyone Says That at the End of the World, 32–33 Evison, Jonathan, 76 Exile Nation, 81 Extravagant Hunger, An, 83 Eye of the Raven, 29 Fairhall, David, 76 Falk, Constance L., 67 Falling Cars and Junkyard Dogs, 69 Farming, 47 Farrar, Jay, 69 Ferguson, Andy, 59 Fight Song, 68 Flynn, Laura M., 76 Forest House, The, 69 Frame, Janet, 14 Fraser, Evan D. G., 67, 76 Fraser, Joelle, 69 From the Forest, 71 Garano, Lorna, 68 Gardner, Leonard, 74 Gary Snyder Reader, The, 82 Ghosts of Afghanistan, 82 Gillespie, William, 76 Ginsberg, Allen, 79 Giono, Jean, 77 Glassgold, Peter, 77 Gold Diggers, 77 Goldberg, Burton, 83 Good Fairies of New York, The, 79 Grammarian, The, 69 Gray, Charlotte, 77 Guy Davenport Reader, The, 18 Haenel, Yannick, 77 Half In Love, 81 Hamilton, Lisa M., 77 Hammersley, Ben, 35 Hancock, Larry, 50 Handmaking America, 78 Hannah Coulter, 74 Hargraves, John, 75 Harrison, Jim, 82 Hass, Robert, 83 Heart Sutra, The, 80 Herself When She’s Missing, 81 Hicks, Bill, 77 Hicks, Sander, 77 Hjortsberg, William, 77 Hobhouse, Henry, 77 Holbert, Bruce, 52–53 Hole in the Ground Owned By a Liar, A, 80 Holman, J. Martin, 78 Hooper, Meredith, 77 Horack, Skip, 77 How the World Works, 75 Howe, Sean, 79 Hughes, Jobie, 71 Hunt, Terry, 77 Hunters, The, 81 I Just Hitched In from the Coast, 79 I Told You So, 9 I, Judas, 42 I’m in the Band, 83 Ice Bridge, The, 12–13 Imagination in Place, 74 Inconvenient People, 19 Intimate Life, An, 68 Iris Has Free Time, 36–37 Irrepressible, 75 Ison, Tara, 40–41 It All Turns on Affection, 70 Ivey, Bill, 78 Jackson, Wes, 67, 78 Jacobs, Michael, 78 Jarrettsville, 80 Jayber Crow, 74 Jesus Land, 73 Jhabvala, Ruth Prawer, 78 Joe Jones, 78 Johns, Marks, Tricks, and Chickenhawks, 69 Johnson, Dana, 71 Jordan, Neil, 78 Joy of Man’s Desiring, 77 Jubilee Hitchhiker, 77 Kawabata, Yasunari, 78 Keyhole Factory, 76 Keys, Bobby, 78 Kirschenmann, Frederick, 67 Kissed By a Fox, 82 Knapp, Caroline, 78 Koch, Stephen, 78 Kore, 82 Krassner, Paul, 78 LaBute, Neil, 78 Lament for the Makers, 79 Lamott, Anne, 78 Lankavatara Sutra, The, 80 Lantz, Kenneth, 82 Last Novel, The, 79 Last Pilgrimage, The, 10–11 Leavings, 47 Legacy of Secrecy, 57 Lethem, Jonathan, 79 Lightning People, 74 Lipo, Carl, 77 Literary Bible, A, 81 Little Russian, The, 81 Lonesome Animals, 52–53 Long Tome Leaving, 74 Longest Winter, The, 77 Looking for Transwonderland, 73 Loren, BK, 71 Lost Son, 75 Lourie, Bruce, 82 Love All the People, 77 Love Lives of the Artist, The, 75 Love, InshAllah, 79 Lovesong for India, A, 78 Mabanckou, Alain, 79 MacDonald, D. R., 12–13 MacGuire, Judy, 79 Maclean, John N., 68 Madonna and Me, 74 Maitland, Sara, 71, 79 Malaparte, Curzio, 72 Mander, Jerry, 55 Maran, Meredith, 79 Markson, David, 79 Marry or Burn, 27 Martin, Richard Jr., 69 Maso, Carole, 64 Matthiessen, Peter Muryo, 79 Mattu, Ayesha, 79 Maznavi, Nura, 79 Mazzarella, Sylvester, 72 McClanahan, Ed, 79 McGlynn, David, 62–63 Memoirs of A Porcupine, 79 Memories from Cherry Harvest, 83 Merwin, W. S., 79 Messenger, The, 77 Millar, Martin, 79 Miller, Saiya, 44 Miniatures of a Zen Master, 74 Mistaken, 78 Mohr, Joshua, 68 Moore, Michael, 82 Morgan, Bill, 79, 80 Moss, Sarah, 15 Mother & Child, 64 Mountain and the Fathers, The, 58 Mrs. Bridge, 76 Murch, Walter, 72 Murgia, Michela, 72 Naess, Arne, 76 Naiman, Arthur, 75 Nameless Dame, 81 Names for the Sea, 15 Nature as Measure, 67 New Collected Poems, 46–47 Nixon, Cornelia, 80 No Footprints, 66 Not Your Mother’s Meatloaf, 44 Nova, Craig, 16–17, 72 O’Brien, Geoffrey, 22–23 O’Reilly, Terry, 80 Oakes, Kaya, 80 Of Woodland Pools, Spring-Holes & Ditches, 48 Official Book of Sex, Drugs, and Rock ‘n’ Roll Lists, The, 79 Old Capital, The, 78 On Dupont Circle, 60–61 On Extinction, 75 One D.O.A., One On the Way, 81 Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of Psycho, 69 Original Death, 28–29 Orkney, 2–3 Other Shoe, The, 80 Pancake, Ann, 80 Patterson, Victoria, 80 Pattison, Eliot, 28–29 Pavelich, Matt, 80 People’s Advocate, The, 24–25 Phillips, Scott, 20–21 Pine, Red, 80 Pitt, Leonard, 80 Place in Time, A, 70 Pocket History of Sex in the Twentieth Century, A, 5 Poetry of William Carlos Williams of Rutherford, The, 49 Porter, Bill. See Pine, Red Potluri, Annapurna, 69 Powell, David, 6 Practice of the Wild, The, 82 Prisoner of Zion, 7 Prizes, 14 Program or Be Programmed, 81 Pure Cure, The, 83 Pyne, Daniel, 80 Radical Reinvention, 80 Rake, 20–21 Reece, Erik, 18 Reed, Berlin, 32–33 Reich, James, 42 Reich, Tova, 69 Reynolds, Simon, 81 Richards, Keith, 78 Rimas, Andrew, 67, 76 Road to Heaven, 80 Robison, Mary, 81 Rockaway, 40–41 Room Lit by Roses, The, 64 Rorer, Abigail, 48 Rosenberg, David, 81 Rosenblum, Sarah Terez, 81 Ruby, Ilie, 72 Rushkoff, Douglas, 81 Sackville, Amy, 2–3 Saknussemm, Kris, 72 Salt God’s Daughter, The, 72 Salt to Summit, 70 Salter, James, 81 Sarkar, Saral, 81 Saro-Wiwa, Noo, 73 Scheeres, Julia, 73 Schneider, Bart, 81 Schwartz, Lynne Sharon, 73 Sea Monkeys, 72 Search Party, 26–27 Secret History of Torture, A, 68 Secrets and Wives, 34 Seeds of Change, 77 Selected Letters of Allen Ginsberg and Gary Snyder, The, 79 Sex and Punishment, 51 Sex, Death & Oysters, 83 Sexton, Linda Gray, 81 Shaw, Charles, 81 Sheehan, Daniel, 24–25 Sherman, Susan, 81 Shooting Party, The, 75 Silver Lotus, The, 82 Slanky: Poems and Songs, 76 Sleeping Where I Fall, 76 Slingshot to the Juggernaut, 77 Slow Death By Rubber Duck, 82 Smith, Janna Malamud, 73 85 Index Smith, Rick, 82 Smyles, Iris, 36–37 Snyder, Gary, 8, 79, 82 Solzhenitsyn, Aleksandr, 82 Solzhenitsyn, Stephan, 82 Song of Myself and Other Poems by Walt Whitman, 83 Sothern, Scott, 43 Speaking Treason Fluently, 83 Spiritual American Trash, 6 Srodes, James, 60–61 Statues That Walked, The, 77 Steele, Jonathan, 82 Steinbeck, Thomas, 82 Sterry, David Henry, 69 Still Point, The, 3 Stolen Glimpses, Captive Shadows, 23 Stolen Pleasures, 74 Strange as This Weather Has Been, 80 Stuckey, Priscilla, 82 Suitcase, The, 76 Swallow the Ocean, 76 Szczeklik, Andrzei, 82 Tennant, Mike, 80 Theft, 71 86 Notes Theory of Small Earthquakes, A, 79 They Live, 79 This River, 75 Thompson, Jerry, 82 Thoreau, Henry David, 48 Toews, Miriam, 82 Tomorrow, Tom, 82 Too Much Crazy, 82 Towards Another Summer, 14 Town of Empty Rooms, A, 68 Tracking Bodhidharma, 59 Trueblood, Valerie, 26–27 Turney, Chris, 73 Two-Part Inventions, 73 Typewriter is Holy, The, 80 Ultimate Sacrifice, 57 Uncanny Valley, 83 Uncrowned King, The, 83 Vacant Paradise, This, 80 Valenti, Jessica, 74 Van Horne, Janice, 54 Vandenburgh, Jane, 4–5 Vidal, Gore, 9 Wachspress, Amy, 83 Waldron, Lamar, 56–57 Walker, Rebecca, 83 Walks Through Lost Paris, 80 Walsh, Robb, 83 Watergate: The Hidden History, 56–57 Weschler, Lawrence, 83 Wexler, Stuart, 50 What It Means to Be Human, 65 White Fever, 71 White Like Me, 83 Whitman, Walt, 83 Whyte, Kenneth, 83 Wiener, Jon, 9 Wilkins, Joe, 58 Williams, Michelle, 83 Williams, William Carlos, 49 Wise, Sarah, 19 Wise, Tim, 83 Woolf, Emma, 38–39 Wrong Dog Dream, The, 4–5 Wynters, Sharyn, 83 Yseult, Sean, 83 Zimmerman, Anne, 83 Contact Information COUNTERPOINT 1919 Fifth Street Berkeley, CA 94710 t: 510-704-0230 f: 510-704-0268 www.counterpointpress.com For review copies and publicity inquiries, contact: publicity@counterpointpress.com For permission requests, contact: permissions@counterpointpress.com For subsidiary and translation rights, contact: rights@counterpointpress.com For general information, contact: info@counterpointpress.com For domestic sales inquiries, contact: Publishers Group West 1700 Fourth Street Berkeley, CA 94710 t: 800-788-3123 f: 800-351-5073 orderentry@perseusbooks.com www.pgw.com For international sales inquiries, contact: United Kingdom & Ireland The Perseus Books Group UK 69-70 Temple Chambers 3-7 Temple Avenue United Kingdom ECAY 0HP t: 011 44 0207-353-7771 f: 011 44 0207-353-7786 enquiries@perseusbooks.co.uk Canada Sales and Marketing Publishers Group Canada 599 College Street, Unit 402 Toronto, Ontario M6G 1A9 Canada t: 416-934-9900 f: 416-934-1410 AUSTRALIA & NEW ZEALAND Michael Rakusin Tower Too / NewSouth Books 45 Beach Street Coogee NSW/Australia 2052 t: 61 (0)2 9418 4518 michael@ghrpress.com FOR ALL OTHER TERRITORIES Publishers Group Worldwide International Sales Department 841 Broadway, 4th Floor New York, NY 10003 t: 212-614-7973 f: 212-614-7866 Elizabeth Shramko International Sales Assistant elizabeth.shramko@pgw.com Catalog design © Sarah Juckniess The publication dates, specifications, and prices in this catalog are subject to change without notice.