We're excited to announce the next pick in our Trust Fall subscription club..... drum roll please..... guitar solo please..... everyone get your lighters in the air for..... Every Anxious Wave by Mo Daviau! This big-hearted tale of indie rock and time travel is an adventure in memory, love and what happens when you try to … Continue reading Trust Fall #6 Revealed!
Tag: st martins press
Review: TASTEFUL NUDES by Dave Hill
Dave Hill isn't all charm and bluster. Charm and bluster are certainly two essential components of the Dave Hill package, but to claim that nothing lies beneath his witty exterior would belie the comedic complexity and affecting sincerity of Tasteful Nudes, his debut collection of autobiographical essays, which catalogue his “misguided attempts at personal growth … Continue reading Review: TASTEFUL NUDES by Dave Hill
LÜC CARL Comes to BookPeople
Austin, get your coozies ready. Lüc Carl, the NYC bar manager & DJ (and pro-bowler, personal trainer, long distance runner and now author) in the snake skin pants will be here at BookPeople on Thursday, March 22nd, 7p to speak & sign his new book, The Drunk Diet: How I Lost 40 Pounds...Wasted. Just in … Continue reading LÜC CARL Comes to BookPeople
Book Review: ‘The Living End’ by Robert Leleux
Book: The Living End by Robert Leleux Reviewed by: Sophia I am a big fan of memoir. I love reading about lives and how they are lived. Over the past month, my memoir of choice has been Robert Leleux’s The Living End, which details the author’s experience of struggling with his maternal grandmother’s approaching death. … Continue reading Book Review: ‘The Living End’ by Robert Leleux
Steven Recommends: ‘2030’ by Albert Brooks
2030: The Real Story of What Happens to America by Albert Brooks It should come as no surprise that Albert Brooks, a famous writer of things, would produce such a stunning, heartfelt, and hilarious opus, but 2030: The Real Story of What Happens to America, his first novel, still caught me off guard with both … Continue reading Steven Recommends: ‘2030’ by Albert Brooks




