The Boy Who Said No is first and foremost a story of people and their travails.
Violence and sex in a small Southern city. Arkie, Clemmie, Oxie, and Johns are linked by a schoolboy.
With this novel, the author of Inquest and Executive Action has managed fiction-created-from-fact.
From the author: I find the small acts within my observation interesting enough to merit writing.
Throne of Straw has been performed in: Los Angeles at UCLA's MacGowan Hall, the Odyssey Theater.
It goes without saying that this book is to be enjoyed with a dram or two of your favorite single malt. Don't have one? Don't worry, you will.
The Debaucher, Jason Camlot's third collection of poetry, walks an oscillating lyrical tightrope between realms of cosmopolitan sophistication and ribald hilarity.
Fraudsters and scammers are constantly developing increasingly complicated ways to steal your money.
Everyone has the innate ability to understand their dreams.
People over 65 years old constitute the fastest growing segment of the Canadian population.
In the first section of Angela Hibbs's second collection, short lyrical poems blur the lines.
Sweeping changes have hit the financial services industry at the same time.
After decades of faddish management styles that emulate everything from samurai warriors to Napoleon.
As you plan for the future, you'd best make this book your bible.
Swimming In The Ocean is about tossing secrets into the water to become free from the bonds.
Like Jamaica Kincaid's Lucy, Althea Prince's new novel beautifully traces a woman's struggle.
From Canada comes a lively sampling of short stories and poems.
This anthology offers refereshing, cogent and insightful explanations of why young poets.
Cassidy is dead and Jack is guilty, that's for sure. But of what, exactly, we're not certain.
In the spirit of Susan Sontag's Illness as Metaphor or Jonathan Lethem's Fortress of Solitude.