FALL 2001 HARDCOVERS
Introduction
Art & Architecture
Biography & Memoirs
Business & Personal Finance
Childcare & Parenting
Contemporary Affairs
Cookbooks, Wine & Entertaining
Fiction/First & Collections
Fiction/General & Short Stories
Fiction/Mystery & Suspense
Fiction/Science Fiction & Fantasy
Gardening
Gay & Lesbian Studies
Health, Beauty & Fitness
History
Humor
Lifestyle
Literary Criticism & Essays
Nature & Environment
New Age
Performing Arts & Film
Philosophy
Photography
Poetry
Politics
Psychology
Reference
Religion & Inspirational
Science
Self Help & Recovery
Social Sciences
Sports
Travel/Abroad
Travel/USA
War & Military
Women's Studies

ARCADE
Candy Men: The Rollicking Life and Times of the Notorious Novel Candy
(Feb., $25.95) by Nile Southern provides the story behind the creation, publication and litigation of Terry Southern's raunchy Candy.

BASIC BOOKS
Letters to a Young Contrarian
(Nov., $22) by Christopher Hitchens discusses what it means to think, live and be contrary.
Letters to a Young Lawyer (Nov., $22) by Alan Dershowitz offers a practical guide to young lawyers on career, law and life, from one of America's most outspoken defenders of both the righteous and the questionable.

BEACON PRESS
A Troubled Guest
(Nov., $23) by Nancy Mairs looks at assisted suicide, the death penalty and other life-and-death issues.

BLACKWELL
Wordsworth: An Inner Life
(Dec., $69.95) by Duncan Wu includes 20 illustrations from original notebooks retained by the Wordsworth Trust and presents the first annotated text of The White Doe of Rylstone (1808).

BRAZOS PRESS
A Visit to Vanity Fair: Moral Essays on the Present Age
(Sept., $18.99) by Alan Jacobs features essays on such subjects as Bob Dylan, Harry Potter and friendship. Ad/promo.

IVAN R. DEE
Complete Essays: Volume IV, 1936-1938
(Oct., $35) by Aldous Huxley, edited by Robert S. Baker and James Sexton, is the fourth of six planned volumes of essays by one of the 20th century's most noted writers.
Reading Susan Sontag: A Critical Introduction to Her Work (Oct., $27.50) by Carl Rollyson offers a critical guide to Sontag's complete works.

FARRAR, STRAUS & GIROUX
Where the Stress Falls
(Sept., $25) by Susan Sontag gathers essays on aesthetic and moral issues of the late 20th century.
To Begin Where I Am: The Selected Prose of Czeslaw Milosz (Oct., $25), edited by Bogdana Carpenter and Madeline G. Levine, offers a rich sampling of the Nobel laureate's works.

HARPERCOLLINS
Patience & Fortitude: A Roving Chronicle of Book People, Book Places, and Book Culture
(Oct., $35) by Nicholas A. Basbanes studies the evolving history of the book. 40,000 first printing. Advertising. 6-city author tour. 15-city radio satellite tour.

HARVARD UNIV. PRESS
Writing New England: An Anthology from the Puritans to the Present
(Sept., $29.95), edited by Andrew Delbanco, covers a wide range of thought and style, including selections by major New England literary figures.

HOUGHTON MIFFLIN
Shop Talk: A Writer and His Colleagues and Their Work
(Sept., $23) by Philip Roth traces the imaginative path by which a writer's individualized art is shaped by conditions of life. 35,000 first printing. Advertising.

NEW PRESS
Lonesome Rangers
(Feb., $25.95) by John Leonard offers a far-reaching take on writers and exile.

NORTHWESTERN UNIV. PRESS
Through the Poet's Eye: The Travels of Zagajewski, Herbert, and Brodsky
(Feb., $27.95) by Bozena Shallcross explores the sensory experience of travel and the visual arts in essays by three major East European poets.

PENN STATE UNIV. PRESS
Romney and Other New Works About Philadelphia
(Oct., $29.95) by Owen Wister, edited by James A. Butler, includes Wister's recently discovered unfinished novel, along with two other unpublished Philadelphia works.

RUNNING PRESS
In Our Own Image: Rituals, Journeys, and Traditions of Contemporary African America
(Sept., $30) by Patrik H. Bass and Karen Pugh compiles a visual document of black social and cultural history in America from World War II to the present. 150,000 first printing. $50,000 ad/promo. 5-city author tour.

SCHOCKEN BOOKS
Conversations with Elie Wiesel
(Nov., $23) by Elie Wiesel and Richard D. Heffner tackles the major issues of our time. Advertising.

SCRIBNER
52 McG's
(Nov., $20) by Robert McG. Thomas, edited by Chris Calhoun, collects the quirky and inspiring work of the man who transformed obituary writing into an art form.

UNIV. OF ALABAMA PRESS
The Remembered Gate: Memoirs by Alabama Writers
(Jan., $29.95), edited by Jay Lamar and Jeanie Thompson, explores themes of artistic self-discovery and regional awareness in the work of 19 writers.
univ. of michigan press
Dearly Beloved Friends: Henry James's Letters to Younger Men (Jan., $29.95), edited by Susan E. Gunter and Steven H. Jobe, explores the romantic side of the reserved intellectual.

UNIV. OF OKLAHOMA PRESS
I Hear the Train: Reflections, Inventions, Refractions
(Oct., $29.95) by Louis Owens blends autobiography, short fiction and literary criticism about the author's experiences as a mixed-blood Native American.

UNIV. PRESS OF VIRGINIA
American Women Writers and the Nazis: Ethics and Politics in Boyle, Porter, Stafford, and Hellman
(Sept., $34.50) by Thomas Carl Austenfeld looks back on the work of four expatriate women writers in Germany and Austria and examines the atmosphere that influenced them.

WAYNE STATE UNIV. PRESS
Mothering Daughters: Novels and the Politics of Family Romance, Frances Burney to Jane Austen
(Dec., $34.95) by Susan C. Greenfield examines the mother-daughter bond in 18th-century fiction.