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Soft Skull News
Ongoing-thanks-for-helping-keep-the-lights-on-at-Soft-Skull-sale! Forty per cent off! Also, click here to get our Fall 2008 catalog. Join our mailing lists here,

The Bandana Republic: A Literary Anthology by Gang Members and Their Affiliates
Edited by Louis Reyes Rivera and Bruce George, Foreword by Jim Brown
An intergenerational, multi-racial anthology edited by two gang members turned cultural workers, The Bandana Republic seeks to showcase the creative impulse that, along with violence, has always been a part of membership in urban gangs.

War Nerd
Gary Brecher
A self-described slob and data-entry drone from Fresno, CA, Brecher is P.J. O'Rourke on Red Bull, writing with passion and profanity on the nature of warfare and the ongoing wars�those on the front page and otherwise�that are being fought every day around the world.

Dead in Desemboque<BR>Historias de Amor y Sangre
Eddy Arellano. illustrated by William Schaff, Richard Schuler & Alec Thibodeau
America's first historieta, a bawdy border comic in the Mexican pulp fiction tradition.


Black Flies
Shannon Burke
"[R]aw and fascinating..."
Publishers Weekly (starred review)

Reproduce and Revolt:<BR>A Graphic Toolbox for the 21st Century Activist
Edited by Josh MacPhee and Favianna Rodriguez
A long-needed and wished for resource, Reproduce and Revolt is a collection of original anti-copyright graphics to be freely used for various political posters, flyers, and campaigns.

That's Revolting<BR>Queer Strategies for Resisting Assimilation<BR>Revised and Expanded
Mattilda, aka Matt Bernstein Sycamore
A revised and expanded edition of the book that defines the new anti-assimilationist queer movement.

The Solitary Vice: Against Reading
Mikita Brottman
The Solitary Vice will make you rethink your own relation to reading. Brottman is wonderful at reminding us what a very complicated act—of fantasy, recompense, adventurism, and (sometimes) perversity—reading a book can be.
—Laura Kipnis

Tintin and the Secret of Literature
Tom McCarthy
"No matter how much you want to disagree with McCarthy. . .his chatty style is so forcefully confident and his argument so tightly constructed and so well-supported, that by the end you're throwing your arms up in surrender. . . . It's brilliant."
Daily Telegraph

Lonely Werewolf Girl
Martin Millar
The latest urban fantasy from Martin Millar, featuring a parallel world of werewolves of every stripe and character causing intentional and unintentional mayhem on the streets of London and the moors of Scotland...

Kissing Dead Girls
Daphne Gottlieb
The latest collection from Firecracker and Audre Lorde Award-winning poet Daphne Gottlieb, channeling the voices of the world's dead women.

No Sleep Till Brooklyn
Kevin Powell
New and selected poems from the 20 years of Kevin Powell's poetry.

Mercury Under My Tongue
Sylvain Trudel, Translated by Sheila Fischman
A lyrical and unsentimental arresting and arrested coming-of-age story about a 17-year-old boy dying of bone cancer...by the winner of the Governor-General's Prize for Literature

On the Lower Frequencies: A Secret History of the City
Erick Lyle (formerly known as Iggy Scam)
A brilliant work of contemporary urban archaeology from the leading activist zinester of San Francisco, author of SCAM and formerly known as Iggy Scam.

Woman's World: A Novel
Graham Rawle
Characterized as a work of genius both by the Times of London and by Absolutely Fabulous's Joanna Lumley, WOMAN'S WORLD is a page-turning, gender-bending, mind-blowing novel and work-of-art...

In the Time of Assignments
Douglas A. Martin
The first poetry collection from the Ferro-Grumley finalist Douglas A. Martin.

Gone and Back Again
Jonathon Scott Fuqua
A wonderfully disrespectful story of a boy, enwrapped in a completely unraveling family, who descends into depression but, in a singular act of defiance, claws his way out.

Freedom From Want: American Liberalism And The Global Economy
Edward Gresser
A provocative book on trade policy that argues that opponents of free trade have abandoned liberalism and are playing into the hands of the very corporations and business conservatives they claim to oppose.

Something Bright, Then Holes
Maggie Nelson
The latest collection from the PEN Martha Albrand Award finalist Maggie Nelson, her most mature and striking work to date. "A stunning collection of real-world stories shadowed by the netherworld of poetry."—Publishers Weekly

Reviewed by the New York Times Book Review
How the Dead Dream
Lydia Millet
Millet's most stunning work yet follows a
preternaturally gifted young real estate developer's passage from anodyne greed to an obsession with endangered animals so great he breaks into zoo cages at night to sleep alongside them, a journey culminating in a Conradian trip deep into a hurricane-ravaged Caribbean island...

America's Mayor, American's President?<BR>The Strange Career of Rudy Giuliani
edited by Robert Polner
with a Preface by Jimmy Breslin
“[A] welcome antidote to the encomiums heaped upon America’s mayor after Sept. 11th, 2001 by so many people who forgot or never bothered to find out where Mr. Giuliani stood on Sept 10.”
—The New York Times

My Happy Life
Lydia Millet
A simple woman looks back on her harsh life with extraordinary insight and unexpected joy in Millet's PEN USA Award-winning novel.

Jamestown
Matthew Sharpe
A fantastical and dystopian re-telling of the Jamestown Colony story by the author of the breakout TODAY SHOW Book Club selection THE SLEEPING FATHER.


American Genius, A Comedy
Lynne Tillman
A novel of remarkable perception, grace, and understanding that functions as a microcosm of America, AMERICAN GENIUS, A COMEDY is the most ambitious novel yet from the author of NBCC finalist and NY Times Notable, No Lease on Life.

A Good War Is Hard to Find
David Griffith
Inspired by the recent Abu Ghraib torture photos, this is Griffith's journey through the vast catalogue of violent and sexual images that have accumulated in our collective unconscious, a journey he seeks to understand through filters ranging from Flannery O'Connor to Susan Sontag to Andy Warhol.

Oh Pure and Radiant Heart
Lydia Millet
A masterfully crafted literary and philosophical tour-de-force that moves from the poetic to the hilarious to the dreamily apocalyptic, Oh Pure and Radiant Heart imagines the small foibles and grand moral negotiations of the "genius" A-bomb scientists. By the winner of the 2003 PEN USA Award.

Skels
Maggie Dubris
...Her New York has everything and nothing to do with the real world, which is a reminder of something very simple: books don't need to get all pompous about our social disasters in order to make the grandest possible statements about them.
—New York Times Book Review

The Fountain at the Center of the World<BR>A Novel<BR>
Robert Newman
"A sublimely frisky novel…[Fountain at the Center of the World] reads like what you’d get if Tom Wolfe clambered inside the head of Noam Chomsky.... The talismanic Catch-22 of the anti-globalization protest movement, the fictional complement to Naomi Klein’s influential treatise No Logo.... As ferocious as a jar of freeze-dried Paul Krugman columns.”
—The New York Times Book Review

The Sleeping Father
Matthew Sharpe
"[A] rare find: an ironist who actually seems to like other people.
—New York Times Book Review

Heredity
Jenny Davidson
Now available!… dark as your hat: sex-and-death with a side-order of extra death. A masterful and outrageously readable first novel.
—Bruno Maddox, author of My Little Blue Dress

Holiday Gift-Giving the Soft Skull Way
The Customer is Always Wrong<BR>The Retail Chronicles
Jeff Martin, editor

Curse & Berate in 69+ Languages
R.V. Branham, editor
An exhaustive and hilarious compendium of curses and expletives, rendered in at least 69 different languages.

Soft Skull 2007 Fiction Subscription
Just in time for the holidays!

Awake! A Reader for the Sleepless
edited by Steven Lee Beeber
THE book to read when you can't sleep.

Mitz: The Marmoset of Bloomsbury
Sigrid Nunez
The incandescent fictionalized biography of the Woolf's monkey MITZ hailed by Alice Sebold in an Amazon.com reader review as an "inventive, intelligent, thoroughly researched and alive creation."

Daily Negations
John S. Hall
An antidote to "Daily Affirmations," from John S. Hall, lead singer of the cult 90's band King Missile ("Detachable Penis," "Jesus Was Way Cool")

Half/Life<BR>Jew-ish Tales from Interfaith Homes
edited by Laurel Snyder
By turns tragic and funny, religious and heartbreaking, angry and surprisingly familiar, Half/Life represents the altogether diverse memories and reflections of a handful of Half-Jews, among them Thisbe Nissen, Katharine Weber, Jennifer Traig, Jeff Sharlett, and Joyce Maynard.

What Would Bill Hicks Say?
Edited by Ben Mack and Kristin Pulkkinen
Famous writers, humorists, musicians and cartoonists comment on America by channeling their observations through the lens of seminal comic Bill Hicks.

Soft Skull Poetry Subscription 2006!!
All the poetry Soft Skull will publish in 2006, with a few 2005 bonus tracks!

The Neighborhood Story Project: Complete Set
Ebony Bolding, Jana Dennis, Waukesha Jackson, Ashley Nelson, and Arlet and Sam Wylie
The Neighborhood Story Project is a community documentary program based out of New Orleans, Louisiana. In the weeks leading up to Hurricane Katrina, they celebrated the release of five books written by students at John McDonogh Senior High. The books were best-sellers in the city and stand as a testament to New Orleans� community spirit and as a map back from disaster. Through interviews, photography, and story-writing, these New Orleans teenagers explored their families, their neighborhoods, and their city. All proceeds from the sales of these books will go to the authors and the Nieghborhood Story Project as it seeks to document the stories of the hurricane and its aftermath.

Burn, Christmas! Burn!!
Brian Gage
A humorous Christmas book about Santa’s Elves who are tired of being third-rate drones in his oppressive sweatshop.

GAMERS<BR>Writers, Artists, and Programmers on the Pleasures of Pixels
Editor: Shanna Compton
The first book to ever seriously explore the culture of video and online games.

The Saddest Little Robot
by Brian Gage, illustrated by Kathryn Otoshi
Ages 8 and up • 35 color illustrations • Co-published by Radiation Press • A Winter 2003/2004 Children’s Booksense 76 Pick!


Snoot is a Drudgebot, and a confused one at that. He can’t figure out why the Halobots, who run Dome City, get so much extra light (all robots need light to survive). He thinks so much about this he gets easily distracted and is consequently the least productive of all robots. He is also oddly shaped and the others make fun of him. Curious about what exists in the awful darkness outside the Dome, he ventures forth and discovers that all it not as it seems. Snoot vows to restore equality to Dome City. With guile, cunning, and good old-fashioned courage, Snoot, aided by some special friends, returns to Dome City to free the Drudgebots.

Lambda and Publishing Triangle Awards Finalists!
That's Revolting<BR>Queer Strategies for Resisting Assimilation<BR>Revised and Expanded
Mattilda, aka Matt Bernstein Sycamore
A revised and expanded edition of the book that defines the new anti-assimilationist queer movement.

Choir Boy
Charlie Anders
Finalist for a Lambda Literary Award for Trans and Genderqueer Fiction and for the Publishing Triangle Edmund White Award for Debut Fiction! And Richard Labonte's Top Ten Book of 2005!!!

Branwell: A Novel of the Bronte Brother
Douglas A. Martin
A genre bending novel of biographical fiction about the sole Bronte brother, Branwell Bronte, which details his tragic demise under the weight of great expectation, while his sisters cultivate their genius in the background.

Manstealing for Fat Girls
Michelle Embree
Cynical yet sweet (but never oversweet) and frequently hilarious, this first novel captures the free-fall, occasionally magical hell of being a freak in high school as well as anything I've ever read. If you ever got called faggot or lezzy on the school bus, you'll find this instantly recognizable. If you didn't, maybe it's time to find out how it felt.
—Poppy Z. Brite, author of Liquor and Prime

Choir Boy
Charlie Anders
"[A] voice box of gold in a dispassionate third-person narrative peppered with wry wit...Choir Boy may well be the first trans novel with Christian-youth crossover potential."--Bitch Magazine.

Deliver Me from Nowhere
Tennessee Jones
In 1982, Bruce Springsteen departed from an upbeat rock and roll sound to release Nebraska--a spare, haunting piece of story-telling populated by deadbeats, desperadoes, and the poor souls unfortunate enough to fall in love with them. In Deliver Me From Nowhere, the shadowy folk fables of Springsteen's mastework are re-imagined in stories that trace a proud but perilous journey across the class and gender badlands of Middle America.

Juicy Mother
edited by Jennifer Camper
Juicy Mother is a cartoon anthology with work by and about queers, women and people of color. The collection showcases comics by such well-known cartoonist as Alison Bechdel (Dykes to Watch Out For), Howard Cruse (Wendal, Stuck Rubber Baby), Diane DiMassa (Hothead Paisan), and Ariel Schrag (Definition, Potential).

The Pornographers Poem<BR>
Michael Turner
“This is an astonishing book, as much for the brilliance of its form as the richness of its subject matter…A dense, witty, and disturbing novel.”
—Elle (France)

© 2003 Soft Skull Press, Inc.


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