New |
Book |
Fresh |
Unique |
Untried |
Unusual |
Atypical |
Original |
Wouk work |
Different |
Prose work |
Stone ware |
Newfangled |
Unheard-of |
Innovative |
Bellow work |
Austen work |
King's work |
Dumas output |
Ludlum genre |
Movie source |
New — book |
Waugh effort |
Dickens work |
Rice product |
Trendsetting |
Cutting-edge |
Work of Barth |
Author's work |
Michener work |
Writer's work |
King creation |
Romance, e.g. |
Unprecedented |
Nana," for one |
Austen product |
eBook category |
Hugo contender |
Scott creation |
Steinbeck work |
Fictional book |
Writing medium |
Steel product? |
Fictional work |
Groundbreaking |
Bellow offering |
Heller offering |
New and strange |
New and unusual |
Updike offering |
Catch-22," e.g. |
Cooper creation |
Highly original |
Book of fiction |
Work of fiction |
Bellow specialty |
Drabble offering |
Literary product |
New and exciting |
Potboiler, often |
Moby Dick," e.g. |
James Joyce work |
Hitherto unknown |
It's a long story |
Emma" or "Ulysses |
Mockingjay," e.g. |
It's pure fiction |
London production |
Steinbeck product |
Thackeray product |
Never before seen |
P.D. James product |
Breaking new ground |
Freshly interesting |
Medium for Melville |
Stephen King output |
Mila 18" or "QB VII |
It's no short story |
Out of the ordinary |
Not an autobiography |
Long work of fiction |
Catch-22" or "Mila 18 |
Stephen King creation |
Bestseller list entry |
Reason for an advance |
Many a Kindle download |
One might be dystopian |
Agatha Christie output |
Film source, sometimes |
Best-seller list entry |
Longish work of fiction |
Lord Jim" or "Lucky Jim |
Georges Simenon's forte. |
One of Jane Austen's six |
Source for a movie, often |
Battle Cry," for instance. |
Portnoy's Complaint," e.g. |
Many a book club selection |
Many a self-published book |
Like new and unusual music |
Don Quixote," for instance. |
It could lead to an advance |
Jeff Farro band ___ American |
The Catcher in the Rye," e.g. |
Source for a movie, sometimes |
Michener's "Alaska" or "Hawaii |
Dracula" or "Frankenstein," e.g. |
Any of Grafton's "alphabet series |
Orwell's "1984" or Clarke's "2010 |
Penny dreadful or shilling shocker |
Elie Wiesel's "Dawn," but not "Night |