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Worship the Pig
Regular price $9.99 Save $-9.99Worship the Pig, Gaylord Brewer’s eleventh collection, is by the poet’s own definition his “Americas book.” The migration begins from his Tennessee home to the Inside Passage of Alaska, then detours sharply south in a return to his beloved Costa Rica, then onward finally to the qualified paradise of Brazil’s Ilhabela. Brewer’s persistent obsessions—translating the call and challenge of the feral world, negotiating some truce with private ghosts—have never been more poignantly and sharply drawn. From chiseled lyrics to more expansive narratives—by turns reserved and raucous, always heartfelt and riveting—these new poems exhilarate. “No schematic for conquest, / no reckless conclusions, // no tenuous argument for connection / beyond the simple truth / of what accrues together.” At mid-career, the author called “the most natural poet in the country” by the Asheville Poetry Review continues to astonish.
Year of the Rhinoceros
Regular price $9.99 Save $-9.99A STORY OF THE DARK REAGAN YEARS
THAT PENETRATES THE HYPE AND REVISIONISM
TO REVEAL THE ORIGINS OF A LOST DEMOCRACY.
The place is Washington, D.C., and the year, 1984. The malevolent dictatorship envisioned by George Orwell has not come to pass.
Or has it?
Under the presidency of former Hollywood actor, Ronald Reagan, the war for America's soul has begun—a struggle of conscience and idealism vversus idolatry and political dictatorship. Democracy is fading, and only a solitary small agency created by Congress, the Office of Whistleblower Counsel, has the potential to restore it.
Dominated by the White House, the agency works like a Trojan Horse to lure and betray any whistleblower who threatens White House rule. However, underground forces within the agency are actively resisting—these forrces led by one woman, Laney Dracos, a powerful insider and staunch Democrat who rejects cooperation with the regime.
Arriving to complicate the mix is Manny Eden, an activist from America's heartland. Like thousands of other young idealists, he is dangerously naive and anxious to devote his life to public service. Following a bizarre interview with his future boss, Mr. Hunsecker—a shrewd Republican curssed with the early stages of a rare, flesh-eating disease—he lands aa job at the Office of Whistleblower Counsel—in part because he had successfully pacified Hunsecker, but also, oddly enough, because he is a big fan of Ronald Reagan, having learned to idolize "The Gipper" at a young age.
Other liberals, even his mother, are naturally alarmed by his outlook, but Manny sees himself as an independent thinker. To him though, such political matters are far less important than his goal to help America by protecting whistleblowers—men and women he sincerely believes to be heroess. Having once been a whistleblower himself, and suffered a series of demeaning, dead-end jobs in his hometown of Kenosha, he is desperate for a meaningful career and determined to do the right thing.
However, no sooner does he arrive at his new job on K Street, than things begin to go wrong. Manny is shocked out of his wits by an enraged and hostile staffer, none other than Laney Dracos herself—known to the ageency as the "agenda-sly Democrat who wants to destroy President Reagan." In the weeks which follow, and despite the many obstacles, Manny learns to forsake office politics and doggedly pursue his mission to provide aid and succor to despondent whistleblowers. Unknown to him, he is being scrutinized, not only by Hunsecker and his toadies, but by the resistance—a secrret anti-government organization known as "The American Watch."
After experiencing a series of revelations and calamities, Manny learns the demoralizing truth at last. He will never be allowed to help even a single whistleblower, no matter the urgency or the issue. Meanwhile, his enemy, Laney Dracos, becomes both his mentor and source of hope. At her urging, he joins forces with her, and together they undertake a mission to expose and overthrow the agency regime.
The White House officials who stand in their way, however, are adamant and ruthless. Their plan is to clear the field for their corporate clients by making the government safe from real public scrutiny for all time to come—and with tens of billions at stake, the servants of corporate Washhington will use any means necessary to stop their enemies. The take-over of the American government has begun, and Manny Eden will soon learn, with the help of Laney Dracos, what it truly means to live in the Year of The Rhinoceros.
Yellow
Regular price $34.95 Save $-34.95CRITICALLY ACCLAIMED AUTHOR
“Mysterious and mesmerizing.”––Claire Stanford, Author of Happy for You
Yellow is a luminous, genre-defying debut that fuses cosmic mystery, trauma, and transformation. It will take you on a journey through time, space, and the inner wilderness of one girl’s mind.
It’s 1973: summer of the Watergate hearings and Skylab’s launch into space when 12-year-old Z discovers an unclassified slime mold growing in her Louisiana backyard. Something compels her deep coherence with this magical creature—until an incident with a serial killer at the lake disrupts their connection. Both mystifying and metaphorical, Yellow becomes a guiding force for her brother Clem, a New Orleans seeker. As years pass, Z tries to recover what life has taught her to forget. A multi-threaded novel, Yellow weaves fact, physics, space exploration, and philosophy to create a transcendent reading experience.
Yellow
Regular price $18.95 Save $-18.95CRITICALLY ACCLAIMED AUTHOR
“Mysterious and mesmerizing.”—Claire Stanford, Author of Happy for You
Yellow is a luminous, genre-defying debut that fuses cosmic mystery, trauma, and transformation. It will take you on a journey through time, space, and the inner wilderness of one girl’s mind.
It’s 1973: summer of the Watergate hearings and Skylab’s launch into space when 12-year-old Z discovers an unclassified slime mold growing in her Louisiana backyard. Something compels her deep coherence with this magical creature—until an incident with a serial killer at the lake disrupts their connection. Both mystifying and metaphorical, Yellow becomes a guiding force for her brother Clem, a New Orleans seeker. As years pass, Z tries to recover what life has taught her to forget. A multi-threaded novel, Yellow weaves fact, physics, space exploration, and philosophy to create a transcendent reading experience.
Yellow
Regular price $9.99 Save $-9.99CRITICALLY ACCLAIMED AUTHOR
“Mysterious and mesmerizing.”—Claire Stanford, Author of Happy for You
Yellow is a luminous, genre-defying debut that fuses cosmic mystery, trauma, and transformation. It will take you on a journey through time, space, and the inner wilderness of one girl’s mind.
It’s 1973: summer of the Watergate hearings and Skylab’s launch into space when 12-year-old Z discovers an unclassified slime mold growing in her Louisiana backyard. Something compels her deep coherence with this magical creature—until an incident with a serial killer at the lake disrupts their connection. Both mystifying and metaphorical, Yellow becomes a guiding force for her brother Clem, a New Orleans seeker. As years pass, Z tries to recover what life has taught her to forget. A multi-threaded novel, Yellow weaves fact, physics, space exploration, and philosophy to create a transcendent reading experience.
You Were Watching from the Sand
Regular price $16.95 Save $-16.95Playful, kinetic, and devastating in turn, You Were Watching from the Sand is a collection in which Haitian men, women, and children who find their lives cleaved by the interminably strange bite back at the bizarre with their own oddities. In “belly,” a young woman abandoned by her only living relative makes a person from the mud beside her backyard creek. In “We Feel it in Punta Cana,” a domestic child servant in the Dominican Republic tours through his own lush imagination to make his material conditions more bearable. In “The Oldest Sensation is Anger,” a teenager invites a same-aged family friend into her apartment and uncovers a spate of disturbing secrets about her. Written in a mixture of high lyricism, absurdist comedy, and Haitian cultural witticisms, this is a collection whose dynamism matches that of its characters at every beat and turn.
You Were Watching from the Sand
Regular price $36.95 Save $-36.95Playful, kinetic, and devastating in turn, You Were Watching from the Sand is a collection in which Haitian men, women, and children who find their lives cleaved by the interminably strange bite back at the bizarre with their own oddities. In “belly,” a young woman abandoned by her only living relative makes a person from the mud beside her backyard creek. In “We Feel it in Punta Cana,” a domestic child servant in the Dominican Republic tours through his own lush imagination to make his material conditions more bearable. In “The Oldest Sensation is Anger,” a teenager invites a same-aged family friend into her apartment and uncovers a spate of disturbing secrets about her. Written in a mixture of high lyricism, absurdist comedy, and Haitian cultural witticisms, this is a collection whose dynamism matches that of its characters at every beat and turn.
You Were Watching from the Sand
Regular price $9.99 Save $-9.99Playful, kinetic, and devastating in turn, You Were Watching from the Sand is a collection in which Haitian men, women, and children who find their lives cleaved by the interminably strange bite back at the bizarre with their own oddities. In “belly,” a young woman abandoned by her only living relative makes a person from the mud beside her backyard creek. In “We Feel it in Punta Cana,” a domestic child servant in the Dominican Republic tours through his own lush imagination to make his material conditions more bearable. In “The Oldest Sensation is Anger,” a teenager invites a same-aged family friend into her apartment and uncovers a spate of disturbing secrets about her. Written in a mixture of high lyricism, absurdist comedy, and Haitian cultural witticisms, this is a collection whose dynamism matches that of its characters at every beat and turn.
Your Nostalgia is Killing Me
Regular price $16.95 Save $-16.95John Weir, author of The Irreversible Decline of Eddie Socket, a defining novel of 1980s New York in its response to the global AIDS crisis, has written a story collection that chronicles the long aftermath of epidemic death, as recorded in the tragicomic voice of a gay man who survived high school in the 1970s, the AIDS death of his best friend in the 1990s, and his complicated relationship with his mother, “a movie star without a movie to star in,” whose life is winding to a close in a retirement community where she lives alone with her last dog.
Your Nostalgia is Killing Me
Regular price $9.99 Save $-9.99John Weir, author of The Irreversible Decline of Eddie Socket, a defining novel of 1980s New York in its response to the global AIDS crisis, has written a story collection that chronicles the long aftermath of epidemic death, as recorded in the tragicomic voice of a gay man who survived high school in the 1970s, the AIDS death of his best friend in the 1990s, and his complicated relationship with his mother, “a movie star without a movie to star in,” whose life is winding to a close in a retirement community where she lives alone with her last dog.