Results for 'percival everett'

23 results
  1. The Art of Opposition
    1. Courttia Newland

    The Art of Opposition

    On Hope, Resilience and Creative Expression Beyond the Mainstream

    Alongside his own observations and experiences, he explores the work of - and in some instances interviews - other oppositional artists, including Percival Everett, Lou Mensah, Iain Banks, Jean Binta Breeze and others.

    € 23,50
  2. McSweeney's Issue 81 (McSweeney's Quarterly Concern)
    1. Dave Eggers

    McSweeney's Issue 81 (McSweeney's Quarterly Concern)

    € 30,95
  3. California Rewritten
    1. John Freeman

    California Rewritten

    A Journey Through the Golden State's New Literature

    Best LA-Centric Books of 2025 - LA Taco California Book Club Selection - Alta JournalPraise for California Rewritten: "There is a feeling to a John Freeman literary essay—and that feeling is awe and that feeling is fascination. In California Rewritten, Freeman writes with singular precision and intelligence about new California literature, animating that mysterious relationship that unfolds when a writer's imagination engages with place. In Freeman's hands, California is a literary mecca, and each essay a revelation. I can imagine a life of just reading these essays and revisiting the books described, each act nurtured by the other." —Ingrid Rojas Contreras, author of The Man Who Could Move Clouds "Trump fans beware, this book is filled with things your hero won't like: diversity, dissent, and a celebration of the most un-Trumpish of all states, California. John Freeman's crisp, incisive essays cast a wonderfully sensitive eye on a wide-ranging collection of people who've written about this state in novels, reportage, memoir, history, and more. Step aside, New York; the center of the American literary universe has moved here." —Adam Hochschild, author of American Midnight "Here is vindication of all that I have argued the last fifty years—that California has had and currently has the richest, the most literary tradition in the country, the most recent of which is so beautifully chronicled in this book. I know I'm not the only California writer to say, Thank you, John Freeman." —Greg Sarris, author of The Forgetters "What's most compelling about the work gathered here isn't what it has to tell us about our past, however recent, but what it has to say about the present and the future of California's restless and insurgent literature [...] At the book's heart is the necessary notion that literature is dynamic, living, that it changes and develops as we do, that it can show us who we are." —David L. Ulin, Alta Journal "If you want to learn more about how the story of California has been told and how it has changed over the years, you will find much to enjoy in this book." —Seattle Book Review "Freeman’s insightful essays mix anecdotes, California history, and illuminating insight." —Mike Sonksen, L.A. TACO "In putting together a collection of representative California writing, Freeman wanted to present a broader picture of the California experience by embracing prominent works from writers of color, including Walter Mosley, Tommy Orange, Maxine Hong Kingston and many others. His new book of essays serves as a handy field guide to the Golden State's current literary landscape—covering almost 50 books from living writers that capture the California experience, complete with an appendix listing 99 other quintessentially California titles from writers living and dead." —Lookout Santa Cruz "Extraordinarily well written. Freeman's California is admirably multicultural, like the state itself." —California Review of Books Praise for Freeman's: California: "Captures the western state's complex history through the eyes of both new writers and established names . . . From every facet of the literary world, this cacophony of fresh and well-known writers with every award under their collective belts movingly interprets struggles and dreams in the Sunshine State." ―Shelf Awareness (starred review) "Tells the story of California in pieces, which is the only way it can be told . . . The point―or one of them―is that, in California, one must learn to persevere. In this collection, California in all its glorious complexity comes vividly to life." ―Kirkus Reviews "Illuminating . . . Perfect reading for our ever-accelerating times." ―NPR's Book Concierge "Freeman’s is fresh, provocative, engrossing" ―BBC.com "There's an illustrious new literary journal in town . . . [with] fiction, nonfiction, and poetry by new voices and literary heavyweights . . . alike." ―Vogue.com Praise for Tales of Two Americas: Stories of Inequality in a Divided Nation, edited by John Freeman: "A brilliant anthology . . . There is so much excellent writing in the pages of Tales of Two Americas." —Salon "Each contribution stands out. Each voice is unique. The only common threads in the collection are theme and excellence . . . This anthology is spectacular and devastating and provocative." —Minneapolis Star Tribune "Masterful and affecting stories, essays, and poems by 36 writers profoundly attuned to the sources and implications of social rupture. These are sharply inquisitive and provocative works." —Booklist (starred review)

    € 30,50
  4. The Shakespeare and Company Book of Interviews
    1. Adam Biles

    The Shakespeare and Company Book of Interviews

    An illuminating collection of interviews between the prestigious Shakespeare and Company bookshop and the best writers of our time

    € 17,95
  5. The Shakespeare and Company Book of Interviews
    1. Adam Biles

    The Shakespeare and Company Book of Interviews

    An illuminating collection of interviews between the prestigious Shakespeare and Company bookshop and the best writers of our time

    € 27,50
  6. Passing into the Present
    1. Sinead Moynihan

    Passing into the Present

    Contemporary American Fiction of Racial and Gender Passing

    This is the first full-length study of contemporary American fiction of passing. Its takes as its point of departure the return of racial and gender passing in the 1990’s in order to make claims about wider trends in contemporary American fiction.

    € 34,50
  7. Approximate Gestures
    1. Anthony Stewart

    Approximate Gestures

    Infinite Spaces in the Fiction of Percival Everett

    Argues that the writing of Percival Everett compels readers to retrain their thinking habits and to value uncertainty. Stewart maintains that Everett's fiction challenges its interpreters to question their assumptions, consider the spaces in between categories, and embrace the potential of a larger, more uncertain world.

    € 55,50
  8. Black Bourgeois
    1. Candice M. Jenkins

    Black Bourgeois

    Class and Sex in the Flesh

    "Bourgeois in the Flesh examines how late 20th and early 21st century African American literary texts grapple with the dilemma of black bourgeois subjectivity"--

    € 29,50
  9. Black Bourgeois
    1. Candice M. Jenkins

    Black Bourgeois

    Class and Sex in the Flesh

    "Bourgeois in the Flesh examines how late 20th and early 21st century African American literary texts grapple with the dilemma of black bourgeois subjectivity"--

    € 120,50
  10. Race and the Literary Encounter
    1. Lesley Larkin

    Race and the Literary Encounter

    Black Literature from James Weldon Johnson to Percival Everett

    "A fact never to be forgotten is that reading was prohibited for slaves, an act that 'marked literacy as a paradoxical sign of both outlaw status and freedom.'"—AMERICAN LITERARY SCHOLARSHIP "An illuminating study that promises to make significant inroads in the field of African American literary criticism and American studies. Larkin poses a series of provocative queries about the 'politics' of writing, reading, and interpreting 20th century literature by African and Caribbean American writers."—Salamishah Tillet, author of Sites of Slavery: Citizenship and Racial Democracy in the Post-Civil Rights Imagination

    € 88,95
  11. Race and the Literary Encounter
    1. Lesley Larkin

    Race and the Literary Encounter

    Black Literature from James Weldon Johnson to Percival Everett

    "A fact never to be forgotten is that reading was prohibited for slaves, an act that 'marked literacy as a paradoxical sign of both outlaw status and freedom.'"—AMERICAN LITERARY SCHOLARSHIP "An illuminating study that promises to make significant inroads in the field of African American literary criticism and American studies. Larkin poses a series of provocative queries about the 'politics' of writing, reading, and interpreting 20th century literature by African and Caribbean American writers."—Salamishah Tillet, author of Sites of Slavery: Citizenship and Racial Democracy in the Post-Civil Rights Imagination

    € 31,95
  12. Passing into the Present
    1. Sinead Moynihan

    Passing into the Present

    Contemporary American Fiction of Racial and Gender Passing

    This is the first full-length study of contemporary American fiction of passing. Its takes as its point of departure the return of racial and gender passing in the 1990’s in order to make claims about wider trends in contemporary American fiction.

    € 117,95