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If you liked Dark Roots, try these:
by Lorrie Moore
Published Oct 2014
Read ReviewsThese eight masterly stories reveal Lorrie Moore at her most mature and in a perfect configuration of craft, mind, and bewitched spirit.
by Daniel Orozco
Published May 2012
Read ReviewsOrientation introduces a writer at the height of his powers, whose work surely invites us to reassess the landscape of American fiction.
Everything Ravaged, Everything Burned
by Wells Tower
Published Feb 2010
Read ReviewsIn the stories of Wells Tower, families fall apart and messily try to reassemble themselves. His version of America is touched with the seamy splendor of the dropout, the misfit: failed inventors, boozy dreamers, hapless fathers, wayward sons.
by Amanda Eyre Ward
Published Apr 2009
Read ReviewsFrom San Francisco to Savannah, Montana to Texas, Amanda Eyre Wards characters are united in their fervent search to find a place where they truly belong. Her stories are imbued with humor, clear-eyed insight, and emotional richness.
by Jeffrey Eugenides
Published Jan 2009
Read Reviews"Read these love stories in the safety of your single bed. Let everybody else suffer." Jeffrey Eugenides, from the introduction to My Mistress's Sparrow Is Dead.
by Olaf Olafsson
Published Jan 2008
Read ReviewsA haunting collection of thematically linked stories that encompasses the twelve months of a year, capturing the most candid moments between lovers, husbands and wives, parents and children.
Everyman's Rules for Scientific Living
by Carrie Tiffany
Published Jul 2007
Read ReviewsThe government "Better Farming Train" brings advice to the small towns of Australia. The train is staffed by irresistibly eccentric agricultural and domestic experts; and when two of the train's experts fall in love, in an atmosphere of heady scientific idealism they settle in the impoverished Mallee farmland with the ambition of ...
by Alice Munro
Published Nov 2005
Read ReviewsHere are the infinite betrayals and surprises of lovebetween men and women, between friends, between parents and childrenthat are the stuff of all our lives.
by Rattawut Lapcharoensap
Published Jan 2005
Read ReviewsA glorious fiction debut written with exceptional acuity by an award-winning twenty-five-year-old Thai-American writer. Read a complete short story at BookBrowse.
by Lorrie Moore
Published Sep 1999
Read ReviewsExplores the personal and the universal, the idiosyncratic and the mundane, with all the wit, brio, and verve that have made her one of the best storytellers of our time.
Harvard is the storehouse of knowledge because the freshmen bring so much in and the graduates take so little out.
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