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A Novel
by Richard Powers
If you liked The Echo Maker, try these:
by Richard Powers
Published Apr 2019
Read Reviews"The best novel ever written about trees, and really just one of the best novels, period."
—Ann Patchett
by Anil Ananthaswamy
Published Aug 2016
Read ReviewsA tour of the latest neuroscience of schizophrenia, autism, Alzheimer's disease, ecstatic epilepsy, Cotard's syndrome, out-of-body experiences, and other disordersrevealing the awesome power of the human sense of self from a master of science journalism
by Ian McEwan
Published Mar 2011
Read ReviewsMichael Beard is a Nobel prizewinning physicist whose best work is behind him, and whose fifth marriage is crumbling. However, an invitation to travel to New Mexico offers him a chance for him to extricate himself from his marital problems, reinvigorate his career, and save the world from environmental disaster. Can a man who has made a mess ...
by Joshua Ferris
Published Sep 2010
Read ReviewsWhat drives a man to stay in a marriage, in a job? What forces him away? Is love or conscience enough to overcome the darker, stronger urges of the natural world? The Unnamed is a deeply felt, luminous novel about modern life, ancient yearnings, and the power of human understanding.
by Paul Auster
Published Jun 2010
Read ReviewsOne of Americas greatest novelists dazzlingly reinvents the coming-of-age story in his most passionate and surprising book to date.
by Rivka Galchen
Published Apr 2009
Read ReviewsAtmospheric Disturbances is at once a moving love story, a dark comedy, a psychological thriller, and a deeply disturbing portrait of a fracturing mind.
by Marianne Wiggins
Published Jun 2008
Read ReviewsThe Shadow Catcher dramatically inhabits the space where past and present intersect, seamlessly interweaving narratives from two different eras: the first fraught passion between turn-of-the-twentieth-century icon Edward Curtis (1868-1952) and his muse-wife, Clara; and a twenty-first-century journey of redemption.
by Laura Restrepo
Published Mar 2008
Read ReviewsAguilar, an unemployed literature professor who has resorted to selling dog food for a living, returns home from a short trip to discover that his wife, Agustina, has gone mad. He doesnt know what has happened during his absence, and in his search for answers, he gradually unearths profound and shadowy secrets about her past.
by Claire Messud
Published Jun 2007
Read ReviewsA dazzling, masterful novel about the intersections in the lives of three friends, now on the cusp of their thirties, making their wayand notin New York City.
by T Jefferson Parker
Published Jan 2007
Read ReviewsFollowing an accident, homicide detective Robbie Brownlaw, develops synesthesia, a neurological condition where your senses get mixed up. Sometimes when people talk to him, he see their voices as colored shapes provoked by the emotions of the speakers, not by the words themselves. When a sergeant in the Professional Standards Unit is found dead, ...
by Robert B. Oxnam
Published Oct 2006
Read ReviewsThe harrowing, insightful, and courageous account of a prominent man's struggle with multiple personalities.
by Sebastian Faulks
Published Sep 2006
Read ReviewsWhat is it to be human? This question, as in Birdsong, is at the heart of Human Traces. Set in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, this is an extraordinary novel that brings to vivid life, through the story of the volatile friendship and dedicated careers of two determined men, the epic quest to map the human mind.
by Jeffrey Eugenides
Published Sep 2003
Read ReviewsTo understand why Calliope is not like other girls, she has to uncover a guilty family secret, and the astonishing genetic history that turns Callie into Cal. Lyrical and thrilling, Middlesex is an exhilarating reinvention of the American epic.
by Jonathan Franzen
Published Aug 2002
Read ReviewsThe Corrections brings an old-fashioned world of civic virtue and sexual inhibitions into violent collision with the era of home surveillance, hands-off parenting, do-it-yourself mental health care, and globalized greed.
He has only half learned the art of reading who has not added to it the more refined art of skipping and skimming
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