Lynne Tillman’s AMERICAN GENIUS: a literary exploration that challenges humour
Lynne Tillman's American Genius delivers a profound, thought-provoking read that blends intricate musings with American history - but don't expect too many laughs.
Lynne Tillman's American Genius delivers a profound, thought-provoking read that blends intricate musings with American history - but don't expect too many laughs.
This strange and unsettling tale of three giants, trapped on the spaceship Audition, is deeply thought-provoking and oddly compelling.
With its fragmentary, non-linear style, Lynne Tillman’s Motion Sickness feels contemporary enough to have been written yesterday.
In Mothercare, Lynne Tillman shares her experience of caring for her mother and confronts the realities of adult caregiving in brutally honest prose.
In The Springs of Affection, cult writer Maeve Brennan captures the atmosphere of her native Dublin with poignant and insightful tales, ranging from childhood memories to adult relationships.
Love, Leda, daring queer fiction unearthed 51 years after its author’s suicide aged 32, is a powerful time capsule of a clandestine subculture.
An author attempting to write a biography about forgotten Scottish poet Thomas Pringle forms the subject for Zoë Wicomb’s novel.