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My Brilliant Friend Deluxe Edition: The Four Volumes
Regular price $65.00 Save $-65.00A deluxe cloth hardcover with sprayed edges and colored end papers illustrating the Bay of Naples.
#1 BEST BOOK OF THE CENTURY âNEW YORK TIMES
âAn unconditional masterpiece.ââŻâJhumpa LahiriÂ
When Elena Ferrante set out to write the story of Elena and Lila, she conceived it as one single work of fiction, one expansive novel that would capture the reality and ambivalence of female friendship, motherhood, marriage, class and adolescence.âŻÂ
2025 marks 10 years since publication of the quartet was completed. To celebrate this anniversary, as well as honor and acknowledge the authorâs original conception, we are releasing the four novels in one volume.âŻâŻâŻÂ
Described by the New Yorkerâs James Wood as âlarge, captivating, amiably peopled...a beautiful and delicate tale of confluence and reversal,â the Neapolitan Quartet tells a poignant, universal story about friendship and belonging.âŻâŻÂ
âThe capacity of stories to speak to anyone and in any time is the fruit of a mysterious mixture of sensibility, ability, and luck, and no writer really knows how that fruit ripens and if it has fully matured.â âElena FerranteÂ
Contains the four Neapolitan Novels:Â My Brilliant Friend;Â The Story of a New Name;Â Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay;Â The Story of the Lost Child
The Book of I
Regular price $24.00 Save $-24.002025 Indies Introduce & Indie Next Pick
The Globe and Mail Best Books of 2025
New York Times Editorsâ Choice
WSJ Notable Book of 2025
â âA small treasure... A bloody and beautiful sojourn in the distant past.ââKirkus Reviews (starred review)
A brilliant Scottish debut, shortlisted forâŻthe Highland Book Prize and the Bookmark Book Festival Book of the Year.
The year is 825 CE. In the aftermath of a vicious attack by raiders from the north, an unlikely trio finds themselves the lone survivors on a remote Scottish isle. Still breathing are young Brother Martin, the only resident of the local monastery to escape martyrdom; Una, a beekeeper and mead maker who has been relieved of her violent husband during the slaughter; and Grimur, an aging Norseman who claws his way out of the hasty grave his fellow raiders left him in, thinking him dead.Â
As the seasons pass in this wild and lonely setting, their inherent distrust of each other melts into a complex meditation on the distances and bonds between them. Told with humor and alive with sharply exquisite dialogue, David Greig deftly lifts the curtain between our world and the past. The Book of I is an entirely unique novel that serves as a philosophical commentary on guilt and redemption, but also humanity, love, and the things we choose to believe in.
âGruesome, exciting... I havenât read many books that are at once so murderous and so breezily cheerful.ââSam Sacks, Wall Street Journal
Mona's Eyes
Regular price $30.00 Save $-30.00New York Times Bestseller âą Barnes & Noble 2025 Book of the Year âąÂ Boston Globe Best Book of the Year âą National Indie Bestseller âą Top Ten Indie Next Pick âą Indigo Heatherâs Pick
Ten-year-old Mona and her beloved grandfather have only fifty-two Wednesdays to visit fifty-two works of art and commit to memory âall that is beautiful in the worldâ before Mona loses her sight forever.
While the doctors can find no explanation for Monaâs brief episode of blindness, they agree that the threat of permanent vision loss cannot be ruled out. The girlâs grandfather, Henry, may not be able to stop his granddaughter from losing her sight, but he can fill the encroaching darkness with beauty. Every Wednesday for a year, the pair abscond together and visit a single masterpiece in one of Parisâs renowned museums. From Botticelli to Basquiat, Mona learns how each artistâs work shaped the world around them. In turn, the young girlâs world is changed forever by the power of their art. Under the kind and careful tutelage of her grandfather, Mona learns the true meaning of generosity, melancholy, love, loss, and revolution. Her perspective will never be the sameânor will the readerâs.
Monaâs Eyes is a heartfelt, enlightening journey across five centuries of Western art history. With the emotional impact of The Elegance of the Hedgehog and the readability of The Little Paris Bookshop, Thomas Schlesserâs sensational debut novel is at once a moving book about the beauty of life and a deeply touching story about the special bond between a girl and her grandfather.
âVibrant debut ... Schlesser seamlessly interweaves the art lessons with Monaâs story... Readers of Jostein Gaarderâs Sophie's World will love this.ââPublishers Weekly
Discover all 52 masterpieces inside the fold-out dustjacket.
The Rarest Fruit
Regular price $24.00 Save $-24.00NEW YORK TIMES 100 NOTABLE BOOK OF 2025ă»BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR - Washington Independent Review of BooksÂ
âA gorgeous novel.ââNew York Times
Based on a true story, The Rarest Fruit is a captivating tale of resilience, discovery, and the secret history of a beloved flavor.
Born into slavery, orphaned at an early age, and raised by a passionate botanist on Réunion Island, Edmond Albius will defy the expectations of his time and, with his extraordinary natural talent for botany, revolutionize global culinary culture by discovering the secret life of vanilla orchids.
A novel of 19-century adventure, perseverance, a book at the intersection of science, exploration, and cuisine, The Rarest Fruit brings to light the contributions of a Black botanical innovator, who, during a time of colonial exploitation and against all odds, changed food culture forever. It is both a poignant tribute to the unsung heroes of history and a vivid portrayal of intertwined destinies shaped by a single discovery.
âThe book is that rare find: a revealing, history-infused novel that spills its tale with the eager breathlessness, wry commentary, and frank truths of a close friend... exquisite.ââChristian Science Monitor
Bite Your Friends
Regular price $28.00 Save $-28.00At once a subversive autobiography of a mercurial woman and a mesmerizing history of the body as a site of resistance to power.
âI bite my friends to heal them.ââDiogenes the Cynic, c. 350 BCE
From a Roman amphitheater where 4th century martyrs are fed to wild beasts to the S&M leather bars of New York in the 1970s, this sinuous and illuminating book by novelist and cultural critic Fernanda Eberstadt explore the lives of uncommonly brave men and womenâsaints, philosophers, artists--who have used their own wounded or stigmatized bodies to challenge societyâs mores and entrenched power structures.
The Greek Cynic philosopher Diogenes who lived âa dogâs life,â sleeping, teaching, having sex in the public square; Saints Perpetua and Felicitas, two early Christian martyrs; twentieth-century prophets of bodily freedom like filmmaker-poet Pier Paolo Pasolini and philosopher Michel Foucault; Russian punk feminist group Pussy Riot; the political artist Piotr Pavlensky, who nailed his scrotum to the pavement of Red Square to protest Vladimir Putinâs tyranny; these are the outrageous, uncommon, but deeply committed activists featured through original interviews and careful case studies in Eberstadtâs immensely readable book, which is part political treatise, part manifesto, part memoir.
Running through her narrative of the Body Militant is Eberstadtâs own story and the story of her mother, a New York writer and glamor figure of the 1960s, whose illness-scarred body first led Eberstadt to seek connections between beauty, belief, and the truths taught through the body.
Eberstadt asks crucial questions for our time: what drives certain individuals to risk pain, disgrace, even death, in the name of freedom? And, what can we learn from their example to become braver ourselves?
The Fair Folk
Regular price $18.00 Save $-18.00From prize-winning author Su Bristow comes a fascinating coming-of-age novel about magic and the choices that define future generations.
Itâs 1959. To eight-year-old Felicityâwho lives on a dying farm in Englandâthe fairies in the woods have much more to offer than the people in her everyday life. As she becomes more rooted in their world, she learns that their magic is far from safe. Their queen, Elfrida, offers Felicity a gift. But fairy bargains are never what they seem.
As an adult, Felicity leaves for university. Unfortunately, books are not her only company at school: Elfrida and Hobbâthe queenâs constant companionsâwield the ability to appear at any time, causing havoc in her new friendships and love life. Desperate, Felicity finally begins to explore the true nature of the Fair Folk and their magic. Her ally, the folklorist Professor Edgerley, asks, âWhat do they want from you?â The answer lies in the distant past, and in the secrets of her own family.
As the consequences of the âgiftâ play out, Felicity must draw on her courage to confront Elfrida, and make the right choice. Interwoven with traditional stories and striking characters, The Fair Folk poses questions about how we care for our children, our land, and our love-hate relationship with what we desire most.