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Books published by publisher Archway Paperback/Washington Square Press

  • The Autobiography of Mark Twain

    Charles (editor) Twain, Mark; Neider

    Mass Market Paperback (Washington Square Press, Jan. 1, 1961)
    446 page paperback autobiography of Mark Twain.
  • Twelfth Night

    William Shakespeare

    (Washington Square Press, Oct. 1, 1993)
    Background information about Shakespeare, Elizabethan theater, and the text accompany his play about unrequited love and mistaken identity
  • Then She Found Me: A Novel

    Elinor Lipman

    Paperback (Washington Square Press, April 1, 2008)
    April Epner teaches high school Latin, wears flannel jumpers, and is used to having her evenings free. Bernice Graverman brandishes designer labels, favors toad-sized earrings, and hosts her own tacky TV talk show: Bernice G! But behind the glitz and glam, Bernice has followed the life of the daughter she gave up for adoption thirty-six years ago. Now that she's got her act together, she's aiming to be a mom like she always knew she could. And she's hurtling straight for April's quiet little life....
  • The Tempest

    William Shakespeare

    Mass Market Paperback (Washington Square Press, May 1, 1994)
    This New Folger Library edition of Shakespeare's The Tempest puts readers in touch with current ways of thinking about Shakespeare. The freshly edited text is based directly on what the editors consider the best early printed version of the play. Includes explanatory notes, introduction, essay and illustrations.
  • The Chronicle of Secret Riven: Keeper of Tales Trilogy: Book Two

    Ronlyn Domingue

    Paperback (Washington Square Press, April 14, 2015)
    A girl with wondrous, hidden powers must find the courage to confront her destiny in this breathtaking sequel to The Mapmaker’s War, which New York Times bestseller Deborah Harkness called “an otherworldly tale that charts the all-too-human territory between heartbreak and hope.”To see is a trick of the mind, but to believe is a trick of the heart. Born to brilliant parents one thousand years after a great conflict known as The Mapmaker’s War, Secret Riven is an uncanny child who can mysteriously communicate with plants and animals. When her knowledge of an esoteric symbol brings unwelcome attention, gentle, watchful Secret finds acceptance from Prince Nikolas, her best friend, and Old Woman, who lives in the distant woods. When Secret is twelve, her mother, Zavet, receives an arcane manuscript to translate. Zavet begins to suffer nightmares and withdraws into herself. Secret sickens with a fever and awakens able to speak an ancient language, in which her mother is also fluent. Suddenly, Zavet dies—and the manuscript is missing. The only clue left is a cipher for Secret to find. Soon, she will have a choice to make: confront a destiny tied to an ancient past or deny it, never to know its whole truth. “With the cadence of a fairy tale and the sweeping scope of an epic” (Amy Shearn, author of The Mermaid of Brooklyn), The Chronicle of Secret Riven is a spellbinding tale of love and adventure, myth and legend, fate and free will—and an introduction to an unforgettable heroine.
  • A Midsummer Night's Dream

    William Shakespeare

    Mass Market Paperback (Washington Square Press, March 1, 1993)
    Shakespeare's popular comedy of love and mistaken identity is accompanied by a section on reading Shakespeare's language, information on Shakespeare's life and theater, explanatory notes, annotated reading lists, and an essay
  • Plain Truth: A Novel

    Jodi Picoult

    Paperback (Washington Square Press, April 3, 2001)
    The discovery of a dead baby under a pile of old blankets in Aaron Fishers Amish barn sets off a scandal in Amish country and an investigation that could implicate Fisher's eighteen-year-old daughter. 35,000 first printing.
  • The Gates: A Samuel Johnson Tale

    John Connolly

    Paperback (Washington Square Press, Sept. 28, 2010)
    Bursting with imagination and impossible to put down, this “wholly original” (People) and “refreshing” (San Francisco Chronicle) novel from New York Times bestselling author John Connolly is about the pull between good and evil, physics and fantasy—and a quirky boy, who is impossible not to love, and the unlikely cast of characters who give him the strength to stand up to a demonic power.Young Samuel Johnson and his dachshund, Boswell, are trying to show initiative by trick-or-treating a full three days before Halloween, which is how they come to witness strange goings-on at 666 Crowley Road. The Abernathys don't mean any harm by their flirtation with the underworld, but when they unknowingly call forth Satan himself, they create a gap in the universe, a gap through which a pair of enormous gates is visible. The gates to Hell. And there are some pretty terrifying beings just itching to get out... Can one small boy defeat evil? Can he harness the power of science, faith, and love to save the world as we know it?
  • Bridge of San Luis Rey

    Thornton Wilder

    Mass Market Paperback (Washington Square Press, March 15, 1970)
    This beautiful new edition features unpublished notes for the novel and other illuminating documentary material, all of which is included in a new Afterword by Tappan Wilder. "On Friday noon, July the twentieth, 1714, the finest bridge in all Peru broke and precipitated five travelers into the gulf below." With this celebrated sentence Thornton Wilder begins "The Bridge of San Luis Rey, " one of the towering achievements in American fiction and a novel read throughout the world. By chance, a monk witnesses the tragedy. Brother Juniper then embarks on a quest to prove that it was divine intervention rather than chance that led to the deaths of those who perished in the tragedy. His search leads to his own death -- and to the author's timeless investigation into the nature of love and the meaning of the human condition. This new edition of Wilder's 1928 Pulitzer Prize winning novel contains a new foreword by Russell Banks.
  • Vanishing Acts: A Novel

    Jodi Picoult

    Paperback (Washington Square Press, Nov. 15, 2005)
    Vanishing Acts: A Novel by Picoult, Jodi [Washington Square Press,2005] (Paperback) [Paperback]
  • Anne Frank's Tales from the Secret Annex

    Anne Frank

    Paperback (Washington Square Press, Jan. 1, 1983)
    Anne Frank was an irresponsible chatterbox, forced to speak only in a whisper during two years of hiding from the Nazis. But her inner voice, her writing, rose in a vibrant song to life. She wrote about bears and elves and lonely girls- about a first kiss, her father's love, the fear of betrayal and discovery. Above all, her writing revealed an indomitable love of life. that gift, precisely captured in her touching prose, is now available in this new complete collection of fables, short stories, essays, and an unfinished novel.
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  • The Bluest Eye

    Toni Morrison

    Mass Market Paperback (Washington Square Press, Aug. 16, 1972)
    Each night Pecola prayed for blue eyes. In her eleven years, no one had ever noticed Pecola. But with blue eyes, she thought, everything would be different. She would be so pretty that her parents would stop fighting. Her father would stop drinking. Her brother would stop running away. If only she could be beautiful. If only people would look at her. When someone finally did, it was her father, drunk. He raped her. Soon she would bear his child.