Now in paperback from St. Martin’s Griffin, When They Call You a Terrorist: A Black Lives Matter Memoir, by Patrisse Khan-Cullors and Asha Bandele, with a forward by Angela Davis.

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Now in paperback from St. Martin’s Griffin, When They Call You a Terrorist: A Black Lives Matter Memoir, by Patrisse Khan-Cullors and Asha Bandele, with a forward by Angela Davis.
Now in paperback from Harvard University Press and Stanford Associate Professor Ana Raquel Minian, Undocumented Lives: the Untold Story of Mexican Migration.
“This book is a reckoning.” -- Roxane Gay.
New in paperback from Bloomsbury Publishing and Professor DaMaris B. Hill, A Bound Woman Is a Dangerous Thing: The Incarceration of African American Women from Harriet Tubman to Sandra Bland.
Yukio Mishima wrote... a comedy? Yes, yes he did. Admittedly it’s about a failed suicide who decides to sell his life in the classifieds, but there we are. In a spectacular new paperback cover designed by John Gall, from Vintage, Life for Sale, by Yukio Mishima.
Now in paperback from Simon and Schuster, We Speak for Ourselves: How Woke culture Prohibits Progress, by D. Watkins. Read more by and about the author here.
The latest from Europa Editions and the most Parisian of novelists, Anna Gavalda, is French Leave, translated by Alison Anderson. Pure joie! (Read the PW review here.)
Which is the real? Now a major motion picture starring Kristen Stewart and Laura dern, Girl Boy Girl: How I Became J.T. Leroy, by Savannah Knoop. The book is out now in paperback from Seven Stories Press.
In case you missed it, in paperback now from Amistad and the late, great Dick Gregory, Defining Moments in Black History: Reading Between the Lines. Winner of the NAACP Image Award.