Grove Press is a hardcover and paperback imprint of Grove Atlantic, Inc. Grove Press was founded on Grove Street in New York’s Greenwich Village in 1947. But its true beginning came in 1951 when twenty-eight-year-old Barney Rossett, Jr. bought the company and turned it into one of the most influential publishers of the 1950s, 60s, and 70s. From the outset, Rossett took chances: Grove published many of the Beats including William S. Burroughs, Jack Kerouac, and Allen Ginsberg. In addition, Grove Press became the preeminent publisher of twentieth-century drama in America, publishing the work of Samuel Beckett (Nobel Prize for Literature 1969), Bertold Brecht, Eugene Ionesco, David Mamet (Pulitzer Prize for Drama 1984), Harold Pinter (Nobel Prize for Literature 2005), Tom Stoppard, and many more. The press also introduced to American audiences the work of international authors such as Jorge Luis Borges, Mikhail Bulgakov, Marguerite Duras, Jean Genet, Pablo Neruda, Octavio Paz (Nobel Prize for Literature 1990), Kenzaburo Oe (Nobel Prize for Literature 1994), Elfriede Jelinek (Nobel Prize for Literature 2004), Alain Robbe-Grillet, and Juan Rulfo. In the late 1950s and early 1960s, Barney Rossett challenged the obscenity laws by publishing D. H. Lawrence’s Lady Chatterley’s Lover and then Henry Miller’s Tropic of Cancer. His landmark court victories changed the American cultural landscape. Grove Press went on to publish literary erotic classics like The Story of O and ground-breaking gay fiction like John Rechy’s City of Night, as well as the works of the Marquis de Sade. On the political front, Grove Press published classics that include Franz Fanon’s The Wretched of the Earth, The Autobiography of Malcolm X, and Che Guevara’s The Bolivian Diary, among many other titles. In 1986, Barney Rosset sold the company and the press became part of Grove Weidenfeld. In 1993 that company was merged with Atlantic Monthly Press to form Grove Atlantic, Inc.

Since 1993, Grove Press has been both a hardcover and paperback imprint of Grove Atlantic publishing fiction, drama, poetry, literature in translation, and general nonfiction. Authors and titles include Jon Lee Anderson’s Che Guevara: A Revolutionary Life, Robert Olen Butler’s A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain (Pulitzer Prize for Literature 1993), Kiran Desai’s Inheritance of Loss (Man Booker Prize 2006), Richard Flanagan’s Gould’s Book of Fish (Commonwealth Prize 2002), Ismail Kadare’s The Siege, Jerzy Kosinski’s Steps (National Book Award 1969), Jacqueline Susann’s Valley of the Dolls, Nick McDonell’s Twelve, Catherine Millet’s The Sexual Life of Catherine M., Pascal Mercier’s Night Train to Lisbon, Kay Ryan (Poet Laureate of the United States 2008/9) as well as Antonio Lobo Antunes, Will Self, Barry Hannah, Terry Southern, and many others.

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A Confederacy of Dunces

“A masterwork . . . the novel astonishes with its inventiveness . . . it is nothing less than a grand comic fugue.” —The New York Times Book Review

“One of the funniest books ever written . . . it will make you laugh out loud till your belly aches and your eyes water.” —The New Republic


For more, click here.
The Disappeared by Kim Echlin
The Disappeared
“[A] poignant love story . . . Lush and poetic . . . The Disappeared is a passionate and emotionally wrenching novel that forces us to remember and provides witness to what was lost.”
BookPage.com

“The beautifully spare narrative is daringly imaginative in the details. . . . Echlin creates a sorrowfully compelling world . . . [in this] powerful, transcendent love story.”
Publishers Weekly
The Farmer's Daughter by Jim Harrison
Naked Lunch's 50th Anniversary
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Michael Tucker
Family Meals

5:30 PM-7:30 PM: ALZHEIMER'S ASSOCIATION, NYC CHAPTER
360 Lexington Avenue
4th Floor
New York, NY


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Christopher Beha
Whole Five Feet, The

SAVANNAH BOOK FESTIVAL
3025 Bull Street
Room 249
Savannah, GA


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Christopher Corbett
Poker Bride, The

6:30 PM: ENOCH PRATT FREE LIBRARY
The Poe Room
400 Cathedral Street
Baltimore, MD


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THE POKER BRIDE


Christopher Corbett’s The Poker Bride is the story of Chinese immigrants who flooded the American West when gold fever struck in the mid-1800s. One astounding woman stands out: Polly Bemis, the concubine of a rich Chinese man who loses her in a dramatic poker game to a Connecticut Yankee in a mining town in the Idaho hills. Corbett uses her story as a lens into the varied experiences of her countrymen, showing how the Chinese made a lasting impact even as they battled fierce discrimination.

In this video, Corbett introduces readers to Polly and the fascinating time in which she lived. Click above to jump into the stories and images behind this undiscovered period in American history.

For more on Christopher Corbett’s The Poker Bride, click here.
To purchase the book, click here.
Visit Christopher Corbett’s website.
GALLEY GIVEAWAY
BOOK CLUB PICK
Father of the Rain

In July 2010, we will publish critically-acclaimed author Lily King's newest novel, Father of the Rain—a sharply insightful family drama with a complex and volatile father-daughter relationship at its core—and we want to invite you to share in our excitement by offering free Advanced Reader's Copies!


To request an ARC, please email your name and address to michael.dudding@groveatlantic.com.

For more on The Father of the Rain, click here.
AFTER YOU'VE GONE
After You've Gone

A sublime love story set in the cataclysmic decades at the turn of the twentieth century,
After You’ve Gone
is a brave portrayal of a man finding hope in the midst of crippling tragedy. The story of widower Henry Dorn—a simple, decent, most ordinary man—this elegant tale beautifully charts the sweep of a life, the grim reach of a war, and the discovery—and loss—of life-defining romance.

“[An] affecting new novel . . . Lent’s real talent is for character development. Henry Dorn lives and breathes, and he haunts us long after his story ends.”
Stephen Amidon, The New York Times Book Review
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