| Kurt Vonnegut - Fiction - 2007 - 354 pages
“[Kurt Vonnegut] strips the flesh from bone and makes you laugh while he does it. . . . There are twenty-five stories here, and each hits a nerve ending.”—The Charlotte ... | |
| Kurt Vonnegut - Fiction - 2007 - 290 pages
“[Vonnegut] at his wildest best.”—The New York Times Book Review Eliot Rosewater—drunk, volunteer fireman, and President of the fabulously rich Rosewater Foundation—is about ... | |
| Kurt Vonnegut - Fiction - 2007 - 338 pages
“[Kurt Vonnegut’s] best book . . . He dares not only ask the ultimate question about the meaning of life, but to answer it.”—Esquire Nominated as one of America’s best-loved ... | |
| Kurt Vonnegut - Fiction - 2009 - 274 pages
“Relentlessly fun to read.”—Dave Eggers • A collection of fourteen previously unpublished short stories from one of the most original writers in all of American fiction In ... | |
| Kurt Vonnegut - Fiction - 2009 - 52 pages
Look at the Birdie is a collection of fourteen previously unpublished short stories from one of the most original writers in all of American fiction. In this series of ... | |
| Kurt Vonnegut - Fiction - 2009 - 290 pages
“The master at his quirky, provocative best.”—Cosmopolitan Deadeye Dick is Kurt Vonnegut’s funny, chillingly satirical look at the death of innocence. Amid a true Vonnegutian ... | |
| Kurt Vonnegut - Fiction - 2009 - 338 pages
“A madcap genealogical adventure . . . Vonnegut is a postmodern Mark Twain.”—The New York Times Book Review Galápagos takes the reader back one million years, to A.D. 1986. A ... | |
| Kurt Vonnegut - Fiction - 2009 - 18 pages
Look at the Birdie is a collection of fourteen previously unpublished short stories from one of the most original writers in all of American fiction. In this series of ... | |
| Kurt Vonnegut - Fiction - 2009 - 18 pages
Look at the Birdie is a collection of fourteen previously unpublished short stories from one of the most original writers in all of American fiction. In this series of ... | |
| |