Lady Chatterley’s Brother Lady Chatterley's Brother. The first ebook in the new TQC Long Essays series,  called “an exciting new project” by Chad Post of Open Letter and Three Percent. Why can't Nicholson Baker write about sex? And why can Javier Marias? We investigate why porn is a dead end, and why seduction paves the way for the sex writing of the future. Read an excerpt.
Available now from Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and direct from this site:
Translate This Book! Ever wonder what English is missing? Called "a fascinating  read" by The New Yorker, Translate This Book! brings together over 40 of the top translators, publishers, and authors to tell us what books need to be published in English. Get it on Kindle.
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Interviews from Conversational Reading See this page for interviews with leading authors, translators, publishers, and more.
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DeLillo Reset
Picador is giving its DeLillos a new, minimalist look. I like the End Zone:

Not so sure about the Falling Man one . . . too much? All the eye candy right here. (h/t to A Piece of Monologue)
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- The Box Man by Kobo Abe and the Question of the Unstable First-Person Surrealist Japanese author Kobo Abe's 1973 novel The Box Man purports to be nothing more and nothing less than the diary of a box man....
- Against the Short Novel, Even When Don DeLillo Is the Author Lately I’ve been pushing Cesar Aira on people, which means I’m having a lot of conversations these days about how Americans don’t respect short novels....
- The Worst DeLillo? I’ve been going back through DeLillo’s books for an assignment, and the thing that strikes me is that the more and more I look at...
- DeLillo Movie Probably not coming to a theater near you anytime soon, a movie whose script is penned by one Don DeLillo (starring Michael Keaton and Robert...
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Recommended Books DeLillo's major work before White Noise is probably his most underrated novel. Its all right here--the politics of paranoia, terrorism, the unnamable--set in an evocative, timeless Greece.
The most bizarre Abe novel I've yet read, which is indeed saying something. About a subclass of Japanese men who go around wearing boxes from the waist up (and then use them as domiciles in the evening), the book is also an experiment in perspective shifts, a highly unstable, metafictional first-person narrative, and an exploration of voyeurism, consumerism, and aberrant sexuality.
Charting the path to three gunshots--the one that killed filmmaker Theo Van Gogh, the one that disabled his Islamic extremist assassin, Mohammed Bouyeri, and the one that led to Vincent Van Gogh’s one hundred years earlier--Olsen tells three separate stories that resonate with one another on numerous levels: the logic of extremism, the role of the dissident in Dutch society, the limits of tolerance, the purpose of the artist, the feeling of the most important five minutes of your life. Read my interview with the author.
Creatively structured, well-executed epic novel of rural South Africa from 1950 - 2000. Takes on a lot and lives up to it magnificently. Highly recommended.
A book that's an interview about the book you're supposedly holding in your hands. Creative, potent, and full of life. Just what metafiction should be. Read my post on it.
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Running Dog‘s cover isn’t shy, is it? They’re all good, really.