Fiction Non-Fiction Poetry Turtle Point Press Helen Marx Books

Complete Catalogue

Fiction Non-Fiction Poetry

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Fiction Titles

All Aboard

All Aboard, by Joe Ashby Porter

Venturing into new, sometimes unprecedented territory, from the luxe restraint of Merrymount through the stops-out eroticism of Pending, and the distilled heebie-jeebies of Dream On.


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Hell, by Henri Barbusse

Hell is the most intense study of voyeurism ever written.


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Earthquake, by Susan Barnes

Earthquake, with its visually acute, roguish, and intimate reflections of a girl’s childhood spent in Alaska and outside of Boston, is a novella in three parts. It is a tiny, humane and quietly humorous tale of a thoroughly unconventional girlhood.


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Lord Of Dark Places, by Hal Bennett

A detective story, a black comedy, a tragedy, Lord of Dark Places, thirty-five years out of print, is a dissertation on the histories and stereotypes that conspire to man and to unman Black Americans by a Faulkner Award-winning writer.


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Collected Tales and Fantasies, by Lord Berners

Here is a delightful collection of short fiction by the quirky, off-beat writer and composer Lord Berners. The volume includes the following novels: Percy Wallingford, The Camel, Mr. Pidger, Count Omega, The Romance of a Nose, and Far from the Madding War.


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The Green Parrot, by Princess Marthe Bibesco

“A strange and beautiful story, with the faintly arid charm of a miniature painted on the cover of a seventeenth-century snuff box.”—The New York Times


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Excitable Women, Damaged Men, by Robert Boyers

“Rage in all its ugly glory takes center stage in this delectable debut...Boyers's stories about academics and art-lovers who hide their more ignoble characteristics until life inevitably draws them out are exquisitely crafted and acutely observed.”—Starred Review, Kirkus Reviews


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The Scapegoat, by Jocelyn Brooke

“Mr. Brooke is a great writer...if you care enough for literature you should seek out The Scapegoat.”—Elizabeth Bowen

“For a book written when and where it was, The Scapegoat is almost unbelievably subversive and kinky...I can think of few books as erotically and dramatically charged.”—Peter Cameron


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Childhood At Oriol, by Michael Burn

“An enchanting story of the fairy-tale-like youth of two British children, Childhood at Oriol has been resurrected from its 1951 limited printing. The novel maintains a sense of gallant storytelling; the author's methodology is consistent with the nature of childhood—innocent yet vaguely aware, and the novel's fluid language makes ordinary events appear interesting and inviting.”—Rain Taxi


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Abdication, by Edmund Candler

A novel of India's independence movement balances fiction, journalism, and autobiography.


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Nalda Said, by Stuart David

“Delicately written and achingly sad...if David ever gives up the day job, pop music's loss could well be literature's gain.”—The Times of London

Stuart David was one of the founding members of the Scottish band, Belle and Sebastian.


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The Toys Of Princes, by Ghislain de Diesbach

Imagine nineteenth-century royalty, Twilight Zone twists, urbane humor, and loving characterization.


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