Waiting for Death in a hotel (Bound in) The New Yorker Magazine
If you like book Waiting for Death in a hotel (Bound in) The New Yorker Magazine here is the list of books you may also like
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The Swimmer
Neddy Merrill decides to swim home from a friend's pool party, traveling from fashionable swimming pool to swimming pool on a perfect mid-summer's day. But as night falls and the season begins to chan…
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The Dead
Often cited as the best work of short fiction ever written, Joyce's story details a New Year's Eve gathering in Dublin that is so evocative and beautiful that it prompts the protagonist's wife to make…
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The Garden Party and Other Stories
Written during the final stages of her illness, "The Garden Party and Other Stories" is full of a sense of urgency and was Katherine Mansfield's last collection to be published during her lifetime. Th…
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The Tell-Tale Heart
A man confronts himself and an unknown listener with his desire to murder an old man.
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In this classic psychological thriller, the reader will find many more questions than answers. Even though this is … -
The Bluest Eye
The Bluest Eye is Toni Morrison's first novel, a book heralded for its richness of language and boldness of vision. Set in the author's girlhood hometown of Lorain, Ohio, it tells the story of black, …
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The Master and Margarita
The first complete, annotated English Translation of Mikhail Bulgakov's comic masterpiece.
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An audacious revision of the stories of Faust and Pontius Pilate, The Master and Margarita is recognized as on… -
All Summer in a Day
Margot is a nine-year-old girl whose family moved from Earth to Venus when she was four. She remembers the sun shining on Earth, something it rarely does on Venus. "All Summer in a Day" takes place on…
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The Hour of the Star
The Hour of the Star, Clarice Lispector's consummate final novel, may well be her masterpiece. Narrated by the cosmopolitan Rodrigo S.M., this brief, strange, and haunting tale is the story of Macabéa…
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The Nose (Penguin Little Black Classics, #46)
'Strangely enough, I mistook it for a gentleman at first. Fortunately I had my spectacles with me so I could see it was really a nose.'
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With this pair of absurd, comic stories Gogol indulges his imagin… -
Fathers and Sons
Bazarov—a gifted, impatient, and caustic young man—has journeyed from school to the home of his friend Arkady Kirsanov. But soon Bazarov’s outspoken rejection of authority and social conventions touch…
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Gooseberries and other stories (Penguin Little Black Classics, #34)
"Oh, good God," he kept saying with great relish. "Good God..."
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'Gooseberries' is accompanied here by 'The Kiss' and 'The Two Volodyas' - three exquisite depictions of love and loss in nineteenth-cent… -
Pnin
One of the best-loved of Nabokov’s novels, Pnin features his funniest and most heart-rending character. Professor Timofey Pnin is a haplessly disoriented Russian émigré precariously employed on an Ame…
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Dubliners
'I regret to see that my book has turned out un fiasco solenne.' James Joyce's disillusion with the publication of Dubliners in 1914 was the result of ten years battling with publishers, resisting the…
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Oedipus Rex (The Theban Plays, #1)
"...what man wins more happiness than just its shape and the ruin when that shape collapses?"
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Sophocles' Oedipus Rex has never been surpassed for the raw and terrible power with which its hero struggle… -
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Hedda Gabler
Universally condemned in 1890 when it was written, Hedda Gabler has since become one of Ibsen's most frequently performed plays. Its title role is elusive and complex: Hedda is an intelligent and ambi…
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