Title

Spring 2025 Catalog

Widgets

Charlottesville

by Deborah Baker

 Publication date June 3, 2025 nonfiction

The story of the torch march and rally that took place in Charlottesville, Virginia, and shocked the nation

In August 2017, over a thousand neo-Nazis, fascists, Klan members, and neo-Confederates descended on a small southern city to protest the pending removal of a statue of Robert E. Lee.  Within an hour of their arrival, the city’s historic downtown was a scene of bedlam as armored far right cadres battled activists in the streets. Before the weekend was over, a neo-Nazi had driven a car into a throng of counterprotesters, killing a young woman and injuring dozens.

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Trying

by Chloé Caldwell

 Publication date August 5, 2025 nonfiction

From the author of the best-selling Women, a stirring account of disenfranchised grief and queer reawakening

If you’re writing about your life in real time, are you inherently fucked?

Over the years that Chloé Caldwell had been married and hoping to conceive a child, she’d read everything she could find on infertility. But no memoir or message board reflected her experience; for one thing, most stories ended with in vitro fertilization, a baby, or both. She wanted to offer something different.
 
Caldwell began a book. She imagined a selective journal about her experience coping with stasis and uncertainty. Is it time to quit coffee, find a new acupuncturist, get another blood test? Her questions extended to her job at a clothing boutique and to her teaching and writing practice. Why do people love equating publishing books with giving birth? What is the right amount of money to spend on pants or fertility treatments? How much trying is enough? She ignored the sense that something else in her life was wrong that was not on the page . . . until she extracted a confession from her husband.

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I Gave You Eyes and You Looked Toward Darkness

by Irene Solà; Translated from the Catalan by Mara Faye Lethem

Publication date June 17, 2025 fiction

An earthy, bewitching, and ferocious new novel by the author of When I Sing, Mountains Dance

Dawn is breaking over the Guilleries, a rugged mountain range in Catalonia frequented by wolf hunters, brigands, deserters, race-car drivers, ghosts, and demons. In a remote farmhouse called Mas Clavell, an impossibly old woman lies on her deathbed. Family and caretakers drift in and out. Meanwhile, all the women who have lived and died in that house are waiting for her to join them. They are preparing to throw her a party. 
 

 

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Regaining Unconsciousness

by Harryette Mullen

Publication date August 5, 2025 poetry

Only legendary poet Harryette Mullen could make a book of our time’s dire crises this much fun to read

As you plan your last meal, chunks of ancient glaciers are ice cubes melting in a bowl of steaming broth. If, in a season of superlatives, you survive the hottest month on record in the hottest summer of the hottest year in the hottest decade ever, you’ll want a cold shower and a sip of chilled champagne.

—from “Hotter Than July”

Harryette Mullen is one of contemporary poetry’s most influential voices, for her inventive language play, keen wit, formal experimentation, and pointed critique of American culture. In Regaining Unconsciousness, her first new collection in twelve years, Mullen confronts the imminent dangers of our present to sound an alarm for our future, to wake us out of our complicity and despondency: Can we, even still, find our way to our unconscious selves, beyond our capacity to harm, subdue, and consume?

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That's All I Know

by Elisa Levi; Translated from the Spanish by Christina MacSweeney

Publication date May 20, 2025 fiction

A “radically countercultural” (El País Semanal) breakout novel about the restlessness of youth in rural Spain

Nineteen-year-old Little Lea lives in a rural town where life ends at the edge of the forest.
 
When a stranger loses his dog on the first day after the end of the world, Little Lea warns him not to follow it into the forest, that people who enter never come out. Over a shared joint, she tells him about the burning in her gut, winding a tale of loss, desire, and conspiracies.
 
Little Lea sees the world through backcountry eyes that distrust the outsiders who come but who also get to leave. When she isn’t working at her mother’s grocery store, she cares for her empty-headed younger sister, Nora, who only cries when she’s in pain. Meanwhile, her friend Catalina does nothing but cry. Little Lea wants Javier to love her, and she doesn’t want Marco, who leaves weed and his best potatoes on her doorstep. As the town prepares for their end-of-the-world festival, she faces her intensifying desire to leave, that burning that unsettles her life—she wants to be useful somewhere else, even if it means being unloved, unwanted, unable to return. That’s all she knows.
 

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Whites

by Mark Doten

 Publication date August 19, 2025 fiction

Corrosive stories about the insatiable logic of whiteness, by one of Granta’s Best of Young American Novelists

The excoriating stories in Mark Doten’s brilliant first collection dissect the pathological narratives that shape our culture and country. Narrated by a crosscutting array of White people, Doten's stories spotlight the self-serving logic through which their characters struggle to make sense of, and take control of, the narrative of our time. They run the political spectrum from “well-intentioned” liberals and newly woke CEOs to Trump appointees, QAnon adherents, and believers in replacement theory. There is an anti-vax nursing home employee, an anti-woke billionaire, a nonbinary sneaker podcaster turned January 6 insurrectionist, a nonprofit LA housing president dubbed “WORST KAREN EVER,” an elderly Republican in denial of his COVID-19 diagnosis, teenage YouTubers responding to a shooting at their suburban Minnesota school, a demonically possessed cookie manufacturer drafting a BLM statement with his new Black employee, and a gay White supremacist figure who may be a joke on 4chan, but will have his revenge.
 

 
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Paradiso

by Dante Alighieri; Translation by Mary Jo Bang

 Publication date July 8, 2025 poetry

The epic conclusion of Mary Jo Bang’s celebrated translation of Dante’s The Divine Comedy

Then, the way an arrow strikes a target
Even before the bowstring stops quivering,
We raced that fast into the second realm.
 
My Lady’s joy was such that, as she passed
Into the light of that heaven, I saw the planet
Itself become that much brighter.                  
 
And if the star changed and sparkled,
What did I become—I who by my very nature
Am mercurial in every way?
—from "Canto V"

 
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Enter

by Jim Moore

 Publication date May 6, 2025 poetry

Lyrical and frank meditations on mortality from a four-time Minnesota Book Award winner

Sometimes the world won’t let itself
be sung. Can’t become a poem. Sometimes
 
we are sane, but sanity alone is not enough.
Warm moonlight and wind. I am sitting here,
 
simply breathing because there is no other way
to be with those who no longer can.
 
I don’t know what to say about it all,
but if you do, please show me how to be you.
—from “How to Come out of Lockdown”

 
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My Heavenly Favorite

by Lucas Rijneveld; Translated from the Dutch by Michele Hutchison

Publication date May 6, 2025 fiction

“A tour de force of transgressive imagination” (The Guardian UK) by the winner of the International Booker Prize

A confession, a lament, a mad gush of grief and obsession, My Heavenly Favorite is the remarkable and chilling successor to Lucas Rijneveld’s international sensation, The Discomfort of Evening. It tells the story of a veterinarian who visits a farm in the Dutch countryside where he becomes enraptured by his “Favorite”—the farmer’s daughter. She hovers on the precipice of adolescence, and longs to have a boy’s body. The veterinarian seems to be a tantalizing possible path out from the constrictions of her conservative rural life.
 

 

 
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