Patrick O'Brian, Richard Snow
Volume(s): Book 21
To the delight of millions of Patrick O'Brian fans, here is the final, partial installment of the Aubrey/Maturin series, for the first time in paperback.More
Neil Giordano, Susan Ketchin, Robert Coles
Selected from an extensive nationwide search, this book of fifteen stories by American writers twenty-five years old and younger introduces a new generation of literary talent.More
Jean-Christophe Rufin
In 1699, Louis XIV of France sent an embassy to the most mysterious of oriental sovereigns, the Negus, or King, of Abyssinia (modern-day Ethiopia).More
Jenny White
"An immensely enjoyable read, richly textured and wonderfully atmospheric."—Sarah GravesMore
Irvine Welsh
Irvine Welsh's scintillating, disturbing, and altogether outrageous collection of stories—the basis for the 1998 cult movie directed by Paul McGuigan.More
Tim McLaurin
"Tim McLaurin gives us the raw world of a Southern mill town, and a young man's passage through its pity and terror to manhood. His is an extraordinary talent." —James DickeyMore
Fyodor Dostoevsky, Andrew MacAndrew
"Not till J. D. Salinger created Holden Caulfield has there ever been so convincing a portrait of an adolescent."—Toronto Daily StarMore
Mark Twain, Thomas Cooley
Third Edition
This perennially popular Norton Critical Edition reprints for the first time the definitive Iowa-California text of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, complete with all original illustrations by Edward Windsor Kemble and John Harley. The text is accompanied by explanatory annotations.More
Mark Twain, Beverly Lyon Clark
The text of this Norton Critical Edition is based, with typesetting errors corrected, on the first U.S. edition (1876), the most authoritative of the editions published in Twain’s lifetime.More
Jean Rhys
"It is a book that does not invite comparisons. . . . Its excellence is individual, intrinsic; it measures itself against itself."--Saturday Review of LiteratureMore
Victoria Roberts
"This is a wonderful, forever book." —George Booth, cartoonist for The New YorkerMore
Albert Maltz
"Engrossing . . . Maltz writes with a Steinbeckian concern for the human condition." —Detroit Free PressMore
Edith Wharton, Candace Waid
The text of Wharton’s richly allusive Pulitzer Prize–winning 1921 novel
of desire and its implications in Old New York has been rigorously
annotated by a prominent Wharton scholar.More
Manil Suri
"A stunning novel, proof that Manil Suri is a major storyteller of heart and intelligence." —Amy TanMore
David Ignatius
Now back in print: the "superlative spy novel" (New York Times) by the author of the red-hot thriller A Firing Offense.More