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Poisoned Pen Press Has Blazed a Trail in Subgenres to Become a Leading Mystery Imprint
No longer purely a traditional mystery imprint, Poisoned Pen Press has expanded to include thrillers, suspense, horror and cozy fantasy to find both commercial and critical success.
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Helen Schulman Is Nobody’s Fool
The new collection from the acclaimed author spans three decades of her stories about the pitfalls of life and love.
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Emma Rosenblum Takes on Manhattan’s Mean Moms
In her latest novel, the bestselling author examines the relationship between money and morals while satirizing an affluent social set with which she’s very familiar.
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Christine Pride’s Second-Chance Romance
The author dated the same two men in her 20s and in her 40s—and used the experience as fuel for her first solo novel.
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For Lena Khalaf Tuffaha, Joy and Grief Are Intertwined
The poet, who is of Palestinian, Jordanian, and Syrian heritage, hopes her recent National Book Award win for Something About Living can bring heightened visibility and more opportunities to Arab American writers and readers.
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Tatiana de Rosnay’s Wild Horses
A young chambermaid, a legendary movie star, and the mustangs of Nevada converge in the author’s American West.
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André Aciman: Hopeless Romantic
In three collected novellas, the celebrated author explores some favorite subjects: love, loss, and the heart’s secret desires.
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Melissa Febos’s Dry Season
In her latest memoir, the bestselling author explores how a year of celibacy changed her life and, against all odds, helped her find true love.
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Julie Clark’s Survivor Stories
The bestselling author’s latest thriller explores the ways painful memories can haunt people for their entire lives.
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It’s All Greek to Stephen Fry
The author and entertainer returns with a conversational retelling of ‘The Odyssey’ that keys into the tale’s timeless appeal.
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Dennis McNally Is Still Dreaming After All These Years
In his latest book, the historian and former Grateful Dead publicist looks back on the origins of the 1960s counterculture and explains how the hippies changed America.
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There and Back with Wally Lamb
For his first novel in nine years, Wally Lamb draws on his battles with self-doubt and addiction.
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Morgan Jerkins’s Epic Love
The author’s latest novel spans more than 150 years of Black history and was inspired by a letter written during the Civil War.
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Jane Austen Is Natalie Jenner’s Lodestar
The bestselling author’s latest historical novel, Austen at Sea, is a paean to her literary guiding light.
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The Wild Life of Lydia Millet
In life and in fiction, the bestselling author embraces the unknown, the beastly, and the unlikable.
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Stephen Graham Jones Knows Good Stories Don’t Happen in Heaven
When it came to writing his first vampire novel, the bestselling author knew he’d have to do things his own way, reimagining the fabled bloodsucker as an Indigenous vigilante.
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Chris Bohjalian: Literary Shape-Shifter
During his long career, the author has defied expectations, switching between genres and writing about anything and everything.
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Kelly Yang Takes Flight
As middle grade and YA author Kelly Yang branches out into picture books, she keeps her focus on crafting nuanced Asian American representation.
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Lawrence Lindell’s Life Is a (Mostly) Open Book
Known for turning intimate, often painful experiences into autobiographical comics, the cartoonist stresses they won’t share everything with readers—even in a graphic memoir.
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Binnie Kirshenbaum Knows Life Is Stranger Than Fiction
After losing her husband to dementia, the author turned to fiction—and wrote the most difficult book of her career.