Browse by category
Best of Mcsweeney's Volume 2 by Dave Eggers (ed.)
$35.00 NZD
Category: Fiction
Brings together more stories from the first ten issues of the magazine.
McSweeney's Issue 17 by ed. Dave Eggers
$60.00 NZD
Category: Fiction
"McSweeney's Issue 17" will be a brilliantly unusual literary treat, taking the form of a bundle of mail, stacked and rubber-banded. Here you'll find a couple of envelopes containing personal correspondence; an issue of Yeti Researcher, a scholarly journal for homonid crypto-zoologists; an issue of "Unf ...Show more
McSweeney's Issue 24 by Dave Eggers (Ed.)
$50.00 NZD
Category: Fiction
"McSweeney's 24" is one of the most varied and extraordinary issues yet. It includes a special selection on the legendary American writer Donald Barthelme, with remembrances from George Saunders, Ann Beattie, Grace Paley and more, as well as some of Barthelme's rarely published early work. There are six ...Show more
Mcsweeney's Issue 16 by ed. Dave Eggers
$55.00 NZD
Category: Fiction
"McSweeney's Issue 16" is as unlike a regular book as you can imagine. It takes the form of a fold-out cover (not just the jacket, but the actual board), with a drawing silkscreened onto the cloth on one side, and the other divided into four quadrants, each with a pocket. And in these pockets you'll fin ...Show more
Mcsweeney's Issue 28 by Dave Eggers (ed.)
$55.00 NZD
Category: Cultural Studies
In eight illustrated books, elegantly held together in a single beribboned case and featuring work by Daniel Alarcon, Sheila Heti and Nathan Englander, "McSweeney's 28" explores the state of the fable - those astute and irreducible allegories one doesn't see so much anymore in our strange new age, when ...Show more
The Best American Nonrequired Reading 2009 by Ed. Dave Eggers
$35.00 NZD
Category: Cultural Studies
This "great volume" highlights the "very best of this year's fiction, nonfiction, alternative comics, screenplys, blogs and more" ("OK!)." Compiled by Dave Eggers and students from his San Francisco writing center, it is "both uproarious and illuminating" ("Publishers Weekly)."
0 - 6 of 7