The Seven Madmen
Roberto Arlt's doomsday vision of Buenos Aires in the late 1920s beat the Beat Generation to the punch.
Roberto Arlt's doomsday vision of Buenos Aires in the late 1920s beat the Beat Generation to the punch.
Dag Solstad's slender novel is a luminously intelligent look at a man's middle age crisis.
China Miéville turns too arcane in his latest foray into the Stonehenge-styled surreal.
Rachel Cusk's novel, "a reverse kind of exposition," beautifully subverts structure, but it hurts.
André Alexis's stunning "Fifteen Dogs" confers canines with human sensibility, and the greater gift of empathy.
Adam Johnson's latest story collection "celebrates" the United States of Death, Dying and the Surreal.
What do goose stepping zombies have for dinner? Why endorphins of course.
Philip K. Dick's alternative history of post-World War II, though at times clunky, remains bloodcurdling.
Put mischievously spinster twins in a small Mexican city and out come sly laughs.
The reissuing of Leonard Gardner's 1969 "Fat City" should be cause for literary cheer.
Christine Schutt again proves her mettle as a stylist in this novel of frayed and fraying relationships.
Anthony Marra uses interlocking stories to create a rich Russian landscape that spans a century.