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Books in A Harvest Book, Hb 266 series

  • Gun, with Occasional Music

    Jonathan Lethem

    Paperback (Harvest Books, Sept. 1, 2003)
    Gumshoe Conrad Metcalf has problems-there's a rabbit in his waiting room and a trigger-happy kangaroo on his tail. Near-future Oakland is a brave new world where evolved animals are members of society, the police monitor citizens by their karma levels, and mind-numbing drugs such as Forgettol and Acceptol are all the rage. Metcalf has been shadowing Celeste, the wife of an affluent doctor. Perhaps he's falling a little in love with her at the same time. When the doctor turns up dead, our amiable investigator finds himself caught in a crossfire between the boys from the Inquisitor's Office and gangsters who operate out of the back room of a bar called the Fickle Muse. Mixing elements of sci-fi, noir, and mystery, this clever first novel from the author of Motherless Brooklyn is a wry, funny, and satiric look at all that the future may hold.
  • The Black Book

    Orhan Pamuk

    Paperback (Harvest Books, June 1, 1996)
    Galip roams Istanbul in search of his missing wife. “An inventive and...exuberant modern national epic” (London Sunday Times); “one of the world’s finest writers” (New Statesman). Translated by Güneli Gün.
  • Slow Motion

    Dani Shapiro

    Paperback (Mariner Books, Oct. 21, 1999)
    Dani Shapiro, a young woman from a deeply religious home, became the girlfriend of a famous and flamboyant married attorney-her best friend's stepfather. The moment Lenny Klein entered her life, everything changed: she dropped out of college, began drinking, and neglected her friends and family. But then came a phone call-an accident on a snowy road had left her parents critically injured. Forced to reconsider her life, Shapiro learned to re-enter the world she had left. Telling of a life nearly ruined by the gift of beauty, and then saved through tragedy, Shapiro's memoir is a beautiful account of how a life gone terribly wrong can be rescued through tragedy.
  • Mama's Bank Account

    Kathryn Forbes

    Paperback (Mariner Books, March 20, 1968)
    The charming adventures of the Mama of an immigrant Norwegian family living in San Francisco. This bestselling book inspired the play, motion picture, and television series I Remember Mama.
  • The Dark Tower and Other Stories

    C.S. Lewis

    Paperback (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, April 18, 1977)
    A collection of Lewis’s complete shorter fiction, including two previously unpublished works, “The Dark Tower” and “The Man Born Blind.” Edited and with a Preface by Walter Hooper.
  • Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years and the War Years

    Carl Sandburg

    Paperback (Harcourt, May 1, 1984)
    Recounts Lincoln's boyhood, career as a lawyer and legislator, his marriage, political campaigns, and years as president
    U
  • All the King's Men

    Robert Penn Warren

    Library Binding
    None
  • The seven storey mountain

    Thomas Merton

    Paperback (Harcourt-Brace Jovanovich, March 15, 1976)
    None
  • Zero To Sixty: Motorcycle Journey Of A Lifetime

    Gary Paulsen

    School & Library Binding (Turtleback Books, June 28, 1999)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. The author describes his motorcycle journey through Minnesota and the Rockies to the Alaskan Highway, recalling the events in his life that have made him the man he is today.
    Y
  • My father and myself

    J. R Ackerley

    Paperback (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, March 15, 1975)
    When his father died, J. R. Ackerley was shocked to discover that he had led a secret life. And after Ackerley himself died, he left a surprise of his own—this coolly considered, unsparingly honest account of his quest to find out the whole truth about the man who had always eluded him in life. But Ackerley's pursuit of his father is also an exploration of the self, making My Father and Myself a pioneering record, at once sexually explicit and emotionally charged, of life as a gay man. This witty, sorrowful, and beautiful book is a classic of twentieth-century memoir.
  • The Millstone

    Margaret Drabble

    Paperback (Mariner Books, Oct. 15, 1998)
    Margaret Drabble’s affecting novel, set in London during the 1960s, about a casual love affair, an unplanned pregnancy, and one young woman’s decision to become a mother.
  • Keep the Aspidistra Flying

    George Orwell

    Paperback (Mariner Books, March 19, 1969)
    Gordon Comstock is a poor young man who works in a grubby London bookstore and spends his evenings shivering in a rented room, trying to write. He is determined to stay free of the “money world” of lucrative jobs, family responsibilities, and the kind of security symbolized by the homely aspidistra plant that sits in every middle-class British window.