THE PARASITES
by Daphne du Maurier · Doubleday
The indolent offspring of two famous entertainers use their limited talents to maintain the fantasy world they have created.
by Daphne du Maurier · Doubleday
The indolent offspring of two famous entertainers use their limited talents to maintain the fantasy world they have created.

by Mika Waltari · Putnam
Set in Egypt, more than a thousand years before Christ, it encompasses all of the then-known world. It is told by Sinhue, physician to the Pharaoh Akhenaton, and is the story of his life. Through his eyes are seen innumerable characters, fully drawn and covering the whole panorama of the ancient world.


by Joyce Cary · Harper and Brothers
The Horse's Mouth is a portrait of an artistic temperament. Its principal character, Gulley Gimson, is an impoverished painter who scorns conventional good behavior. He may be a bad citizen, but he is a good artist, so wholly preoccupied with his art that he is willing to endure any privation for its sake. Such is his contempt for orthodox mores, he takes a delight in cocking a snook at them. For him there is only one morality: to be a painter.

by Elizabeth Goudge · Grosset and Dunlap
A collection of the author's short stories and selections from her novels.

by John O'Hara · Random House
'O'Hara is the only American writer to whom America presents itself as a social scene in the way it once presented itself to Henry James, or France to Proust' The New York Times When the beautiful, imperious and moneyed Grace Caldwell Tate wants something she goes after it, men included. Her affair scandalises Pennsylvania's elite and she must face the costs to her marriage and the man she really loves. A bestseller on publication in 1949, A Rage to Live is a candid tale of idealists and libertines, tradesmen and crusaders, men of violence and goodwill, and women of fierce strength and tenderness.

by Gwen Bristow · Ty Crowell Co
Sheltered girl from the East makes the dangerous journey from Santa Fe to Los Angeles in pre-Gold Rush days and learns value of loyal friends.

by John Hersey · Alfred A. Knopf
A novel describing the life of the Jews in the Warsaw ghetto during Poland's German occupation.

by Mary Lasswell · Houghton Mifflin
Flat broke at the end of their stay in New York City, Mrs. Feeley, Mrs. Rasmussen, and Miss Tinkham can only make it as far as New Jersey on their voyage back home. When they stop by a local bar for something to lift their spirits, they find it in disrepair and the owner in none too better shape himself. As desperate as they are to make it back to San Diego, it's just not in their nature to leave the poor guy there. And if they're going to lend a helping hand, they might as well tidy up, serve a few beers, and see about breathing a little life into the joint—not that it does any harm to have a place to stay until they can find a way to get to the West Coast. Pull up a stool, crack open a cold one, and crack a smile with the third, uplifting and uproarious title from Mary Lasswell to feature her quick-witted altruists.


by Nancy Wilson Ross · Random House
New York psychiatrist helps father recover from nervous breakdown.

by Paul Bowles · New Directions
Three works by America's great writer-in-exile are gathered in this annotatedcollector's edition, the companion to "Collected Stories and Later Writings."
Historical bestseller data sourced from the New York Times Book Review, archived by Hawes Publications.