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The Whiting Foundation announced its 2012 literary award recipients Tuesday, which included 'We Sinners' author, Hanna Pylväinen.
"Why I Quit Goldman Sachs" is an indictment of the investment firm's corporate culture, which, in the end, Smith found intolerable. |
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The anthology, edited by Colin Channer, subverts the simplistic sunshine/reggae/spliff-smoking image of Jamaica at almost every turn. It's amply rewarding.
With the Wachowskis-directed film version of his intricate book 'Cloud Atlas' out soon, David Mitchell finds himself 'happily bewildered.'
In a stylish new collection of essays, the author challenges readers in the study of the nation's myths and legends.
Like his bestseller 'Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children,' the author's new book spotlights photographs, although with a twist.
The books the nominees pick as their favorites can say much about their frame of mind. Then again, the titles add another element to their political brand.
In his new novel, the author sets out to depict a diverse America that isn't melting in the melting pot. Unfortunately, he tends to look down on his characters.
'Who Could That Be at This Hour?' marks the welcome return of Lemony Snicket, who narrates a mystery tale from when he was 12.
The unlikely career of Edward Curtis, who took enduring photos of Native Americans, is the subject of Timothy Egan's insightful and entertaining book.
Johnny Depp will launch a publishing imprint with Harper, a division of HarperCollins, called Infinitum Nihil.
Graphic novelist Mark Siegel intertwines themes of obsession, loss and redemption in "Sailor Twain: The Mermaid in the Hudson."
The bodybuilder-actor-politician's purported 'tell-all' steers clear of anything remotely salacious, a PG-account that suffers from a startling lack of self-reflection.