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Modern Literary Fiction


Once in a Blue Moon by Eileen Goudge

Once in a Blue Moon by Eileen Goudge

by Nola Theiss

Sat, May 01, 2010

Eileen Goudge is a bestselling author whose novels include The Diary, Domestic Affairs, Woman in Red, One Last Dance, Garden of Lies, and Thorns of Truth. There are more than five million copies of her books in print worldwide. She lives in New York City.

A Good Fall by Ha Jin

A Good Fall by Ha Jin

by Carol Kellerman

Sat, May 01, 2010

HA JIN left his native China in 1985 to attend Brandeis University. He is the author of five novels, three story collections, and three books of poetry. He has received the National Book Award, two PEN/Faulkner Awards, the PEN/Hemingway Award, the Asian American Literary Award, and the Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction. Ha Jin lives in the Boston area and is a professor of English at Boston University.m

The Vagrants by Yiyun Lee

The Vagrants by Yiyun Lee

by Nola Theiss

Sat, May 01, 2010

Yiyun Li is a winner of the Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award, the Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award, and the Guardian First Book Award. She grew up in Beijing and attended Peking University. She came to the United States in 1996 to study medicine and started writing two years later. After receiving a master’s degree in immunology from the University of Iowa, she attended the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, where she received an MFA. The author of The Vagrants and A Thousand Years of Good Prayers, Li was selected for a Whiting Writers’ Award and was named by Granta as one of best young American novelists under thirty-five. Li teaches at the University of California, Davis, and lives in Oakland, California, with her husband and their two sons.

* The Three Weissmans of Westport by Cathleen Schine

* The Three Weissmans of Westport by Cathleen Schine

by Jean Palmer

Sat, May 01, 2010

With her modern-day comedies of manners that garner comparisons to Jane Austen and George Eliot, critically acclaimed writer Cathleen Schine turns out social satires with heart. With their literary allusions and insider's quips, Schine's novels never underestimate her readers' love of great literature.

Seducing the Spirits by Louise Young

Seducing the Spirits by Louise Young

by Susan Allison

Sat, May 01, 2010

Author and anthropologist Louise Young, after working nearly two decades with the indigenous Kuna tribe in Panama, crafts a beautiful, passionate, first novel set against a detailed and revealing portrayal of life in the jungles of this remote region. The language of this story reflects the extremely sensuous nature of this area of tropical jungle. The animals, the sea, the landscape, the heat, and the languorous flow of the narrative will draw listeners into the exotic, sensual environment.

Flatland by Edwin A. Abbott

Flatland by Edwin A. Abbott

by Joseph DiMercurio

Sat, May 01, 2010

English schoolmaster and theologian, best known as the author of the mathematical satire and religious allegory Flatland (1884), Edwin Abbott was educated at the City of London School and at St John's College, Cambridge, where he took the highest honors in classics, mathematics and theology, and became fellow of his college. He succeeded G. F. Mortimer as headmaster of the City of London School in 1865 at the early age of twenty-six. He retired in 1889, and devoted himself to literary and theological pursuits. Dr. Abbott's liberal inclinations in theology were prominent both in his educational views and in his books. His Shakespearian Grammar (1870) is a permanent contribution to English philology. In 1885 he published a life of Francis Bacon. His theological writings include three anonymously published religious romances - Philochristus (1878), Onesimus (1882), and Sitanus (1906).