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Japanese poet Machi Tawara is known for her revival of the classical “tanka” form of poetry, which she develops here in Salad Anniversary. Originally published in 1987 in Japan, this collection of poems is now available to English readers thanks to the Pushkin Collection.
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From this acclaimed Holocaust memoirist (Under a Cruel Star) comes a rediscovered work of semi-autobiographical crime fiction. Prague in the 1950s is a dangerous place, in which Communism has sown oppression and paranoia. And when a young boy is murdered, the investigation that follows uncovers dark secrets hidden by the boy’s aunt and her co-workers at the local cinema. I cannot wait to get my paws on this, you guys.
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Get ready to have your brain bent six different ways. In The Bulgarian Truck, Tsepeneag experiments with meta-fiction and even meta-meta-fiction, in which the narrator-writer’s characters move in and out of “reality” depending on the narrator’s current authorial requirements. Among the characters created for the purposes of writing this “new” kind of novel are a Bulgarian truck driver and a French erotic dancer with a thing for hedgehogs…Yyyyup.
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I just started this collection of stories by the author known as “the most important Argentinian writer since Borges.” Through a series of personal, almost intimate, sketches, and two longer stories, Saer invites the reader to think more deeply about such things as painting, history, aging, communication, and much more.
(first posted on Book Riot 6/7/15)
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