New York Review Books
‎Celebrating 10 Years of Making It Classic‎
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New York Review Books

‎ ‎New York Review Books‎ ‎‎What we're looking forward to in 2010: The exhibit of Robert Walser's microscripts at the Christine Burgin Gallery in NYC (and the accompanying catalog with the texts translated by Susan Bernofsky)>‎

‎www.christineburgin.com‎
‎In Spring 2010 the Christine Burgin Gallery and New Directions will publish a facsimile edition of Robert Walser's microscripts with new translations by Susan Bernofsky. This will be the first publication ...‎
New York Review Books

‎ ‎New York Review Books‎ ‎‎NYRB is in Philly for the Modern Languages Association meeting. If you're attending, come by for a free issue of the magazine, discounts on our books, a chance to win a tote bag, and all-you-can-drink whiskey! Ok, maybe no whiskey. But handshakes? High-fives? Stop by! (booth 313)‎

27 ديسمبر، 2009‏، الساعة 02:04 مساءً‏
New York Review Books

‎ ‎New York Review Books‎ ‎‎As the LA Times looks back on the decade, André Aciman named Raymond Radiguet's COUNT D'ORGEL'S BALL a forgotten classic:‎

‎latimesblogs.latimes.com‎
‎In 1999, the L.A. Times asked dozens of writers to look back at the prior century and share books they considered lost treasures -- books they loved that had slipped out of sight. Although the authors were formidable -- including...‎
New York Review Books

‎ ‎New York Review Books‎ ‎‎Elaine Dundy's THE OLD MAN AND ME in the Mile High Club: "This reissue of her 1962 classic absolutely crackles with deviousness and wit."‎

‎kosu.org‎
‎I don't have a Kindle. But I do have my pride and pretension. When I travel, I want something delicious and escapist to read that won't insult my intelligence‎
New York Review Books

‎ ‎New York Review Books‎ ‎‎GalleyCat Gift Guide: Give a subscription to the New York Review of Books (complete with that free 2010 calendar by David Levine).‎

‎www.mediabistro.com‎
‎Jobs and recruiting for media professionals in journalism, on-line content, book publishing, TV, radio, PR, graphic design, photography, and advertising‎
New York Review Books

‎ ‎New York Review Books‎ ‎‎Geoff Dyer, who wrote the forward for PAGES FROM THE GONCOURT JOURNALS, helps revive the new literary salon. (Read an excerpt from the salacious GONCOURT JOURNALS here: ‎http://www.nybooks.com/shop/product?usca_p=t&product_id=5958‎)‎

‎www.guardian.co.uk‎
New York Review Books

‎ ‎New York Review Books‎ ‎‎"The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there." Vote for THE GO-BETWEEN in the Favorite Opening Sentence contest. (It's currently at number 14).‎

‎www.openingsentences.com‎
‎Great Opening Sentences of Fiction‎
New York Review Books

‎ ‎New York Review Books‎ ‎‎"'Take my camel, dear,' said my aunt Dot, as she climbed down from this animal on her return from High Mass." Vote for THE TOWER OF TREBIZOND in the Favorite Opening Sentence contest. (It's currently at number 26).‎

‎www.openingsentences.com‎
‎Great Opening Sentences of Fiction‎
New York Review Books

‎ ‎New York Review Books‎ ‎‎A great (and not only because it includes 2 NYRB Classics) best-of 2009 book roundup from ‎‎John Self‎‎'s blog, Asylum. He picks two of our grimmest books that are perversly comforting. Of A Meaningful Life he says, "Its misanthropy and set pieces make it a sort of comfort read for me:
the tale of a man who realises th...at his life is not going to get any
better."‎

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‎theasylum.wordpress.com‎
‎Posted in Aira César, Coetzee J.M., Crump Simon, Davis L.J., Fallada Hans, Maupassant Guy de, McKay Susan, Solstad Dag, Wander Fred, Wilcken Hugo, Williams John at 8:35 am by John Self‎
New York Review Books

‎ ‎New York Review Books‎ ‎‎Stephen Benatar's Wish Her Safe at Home shows up on Vogue's books to look out for in the new year. Could it have helped that the photo on the cover of the book originally appeared in Vogue in the 50s? (This may be the only cover for which we know the type of lipstick worn by the model: "Ruby" by Chanel.)‎

‎www.vogue.com‎
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‎ ‎New York Review Books‎ ‎‎"Currently celebrating its 10th anniversary, the [NYRB Classics] series stands in bold contrast to the likes of Penguin Classics and Oxford World Classics. The latter publish undeniably great works – we've all got some on our shelves – but are generally unlikely to rock the boat. But NYRBC takes an almost mischievous ...pride in publishing the underdog, the forgotten genius, the one-hit-wonder..."‎

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‎www.guardian.co.uk‎
‎Chris Cox: We all know the books we're supposed to be reading – but are they really the most important ones?‎
New York Review Books

‎ ‎New York Review Books‎ ‎‎On the scene at the MEDIABISTRO eBook (eReader?) conference. For more info on the summit, and the latest of what is happening in eBooks, click here: ‎http://www.mediabistro.com/ebooksummit/

New York Review Books
‎nyrevinc.cmail1.com‎
‎The NYRB holiday sale includes books for all reading tastes and for readers of all ages. You'll find novels, short stories, thrillers, picture books, fairy tales, and fantastic adventures — books for everyone on your list. The Collections are 40% off and the individual books are 25% off.‎
New York Review Books

‎ ‎New York Review Books‎ ‎‎Simenon in the Independent: "...this supreme master of the detective thriller was also one of the great psychological novelists of his century...These are novels of eye-opening, spine-tingling control and intensity."‎

‎www.independent.co.uk‎
‎Best known for his Inspector Maigret series, the Belgian-born Georges Simenon not only published almost 200 books in an awesomely prolific career. In many novels, he scaled the literary heights of his contemporaries Camus and Gide, and his mentor, Colette. That much I thought I knew. ‎
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‎ ‎New York Review Books‎ ‎‎MEMORIES OF THE FUTURE on PRI's "The World": “Little of Krzhizhanovsky’s work was published during his lifetime because it was simply too bizarre (and politically incorrect) for the Russia of the 1920s. I think we are more than ready for him now – an impish master of the fatalistically fantastic."‎

‎www.theworld.org‎
‎Your Face Tomorrow, Volume Three: Poison, Shadow, and Farewell: the final volume in Javier Marías's trio of spy novels extraordinaire is part of World Book's idiosyncratic round-up of first-rate international literary stocking stuffers.‎