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| Enter your email address below to be the first to know about upcoming stories, events and author interviews, as well as our literary lonely hearts and the best new books of the month. |
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The End of the World as We Know it
Ron Currie, author of his own gripping, artful and often amusing apocalytpic vision God Is Dead, takes us on a journey to the end of time, from the unique sci-fi of Kurt Vonnegut to the good old zombie yarns of Max Brooks. |
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History Lesson by Tony Peake
The essentials are these: when Tony was 16 and on a train between Johannesburg and Irene, where he then lived with his parents, he caught the eye of the man sitting opposite him and, before leaving the train, made an arrangement to meet the man in Pretoria under Paul Kruger's statue at one o'clock on the coming Saturday... |
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Aleksander Hemon
Aleksandar Hemon's dazzling new novel is all the more remarkable for being written in his second language. Born in Bosnia and now based in the States, questions of identity and belonging sit at the heart of his writing. He talks to Viola Fort. |
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James Frey
James Frey, author of A Million Little Pieces, My Friend Leonard, and the new Bright Shiny Morning, tells us how he writes. |
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Rabih Alameddine Rabih Alameddine, author of The Hakawati, gets nervous on a whirlwind tour of England, Ireland and Scotland, spends evenings filled with wine, poetry and song at Colm Toibin's house and battles endless, endless rain. |
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