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  • av F. A. Mannan
    339 - 385,-

  • - 20 Quillette Tales of Excommunication in the Digital Age
     
    309,-

    Quillette magazine has provided a forum for thinkers of all political stripes to push back against the forces of intellectual conformity. Panics and Persecutions brings together a collection of especially compelling Quillette narratives, spanning subcultures from computer science to romance literature.

  • av Caitlin Robson
    279,-

    Taylor Swift's defining breakout hit, 'Love Story', was written in twenty minutes on her bedroom floor and now is used for fan proposals at live shows that sell out stadiums and the adjacent car parks. In this book, Caitlin Robson writes her way through 11 albums and 18 years of Swift's lyrics, stories, controversies and re-recordings which set a precedent in the music industry to allow artists to demand ownership. There are bigger issues at play in Swift's lyrics; gender politics, mental health conversations, and the building of an enormous musical community while maintaining that letter-writing pen pal dynamic with fans. A fascinating biography of one of the most famous women in the world right now.

  • av R.M. Frith
    329,-

    Meet Henrietta, 25-years-old, from a once-infamous family...At first glance, she appears to be your average young British person - hooked on the online world, struggling with identity issues, facing a housing crisis, and navigating a dangerous world of toxic authority. Except, she's also maybe a murderer with a love of pseudonyms, Roy Orbison, and different coloured wigs... and very probably a sociopath... and very definitely a genius-level gamer, hacker and holder of often provocative opinions, who's busily ripping off thousands of people with her devious video game.The book is written from her own perspective and introduces 'PidPat' a modern-day street language.

  • av Jay Prosser
    329,-

    A family memoir that builds a bridge across the terrible divides of our times. It's a Jewish book, but not Just a Jewish book. It moves Jewish writing away from its customary setting of the Holocaust and Europe, transporting Jewish identity instead to Iraq, India, China and Singapore: places and cultures that most people (including Jews themselves) don't associate with Jewish identity. It shows Jews integrating with others, not divisive, not separate: not antagonistic. The issue of intermarriage is increasingly important for all racial groups and this book speaks beyond the Jewish community, in relation to how we treat strangers in the form of immigrants and other communities. Loving Strangers has already won the Hazel Rowley Prize (US, 2020) for the best proposal for a first-time biographer and was shortlisted for the Tony Lothian Prize (UK, 2019) for the best unpublished biography.

  • av Lee Child
    195 - 279,-

  • av Scott G. Fraser
    279,-

    Climate Change is coming for us. Its impacts will be universal and will have profound effects upon human health. It is vital we understand what these effects will be so we can - as individuals, healthcare systems and countries - try to mitigate and prepare for them. Climate change is becoming increasingly personal, about you and me rather than about strangers in far off countries. This book is about how our climate is changing, the direct effect these changes will have on our well-being and the urgent choices we need to make

  • av Roxy Dunn
    99,-

  • av Sensier Colette
    175,-

  • av Sasha Stiles
    175,-

  • av Todd Swift
    185,-

  • av Hilda G. Strong
    249,-

    This unique interpretation of Christopher Smart's masterpiece begins with a biography which offers a fascinating glimpse into the life of Christopher Smart, an extraordinary poet who died in an insane asylum all but abandoned by family and friends. Convinced that the current names of the days of the week should be changed to words that represent the true God of the universe, Smart chose seven Greek letters which are references to Christ. Scholars and critics have attempted to explain these letters, but none have apprehended Smart's purpose which was "to preach the very gospel of Christ." Herein Strong explains the reason for and meaning of these chosen Greek letters and their relation to the whole.

  • av Steven Nightingale
    245,-

  • av Christopher Chase Walker
    185,-

    BE CAREFUL WHAT YOU SEE... The place is Brighton. The time: near futue Britain, where surveillance is constant. Everyone spies. Schoolchildren ae especially trained to watch their friends and family. In this paranoid world, both familiar and strange, is a love story of intigue and deception. Be careful what you see. Fusing the styles of Graham Greene, George Orwell and Kazuo Ishiguro, this beautifully told and hauntingly elegiac literary thriller may well come to be seen as a modern-day classic.

  • av Silvia Sanza
    185,-

    The Off Ramp is New York City mid-nineties framed by the OJ Simpson trial, the Oklahoma bomb blast, technology reshaping everything, and a lengthy baseball strike. Our main character, Jake, dangles by a thread, contemplating signals, in search of a muse, revamping, and deducting. His life is already in chaos when his wife walks out on him leaving him with a 14-year-old daughter. Passion, murder, boyhood memories, and a dose of magic realism fuse and explode into awakening and resurrection.

  • av Mark Ford
    279,-

    A Guest Among Stars collects recent essays by one of the most respected poet-critics of our time. Mark Ford discusses poets and their work, exploring context and settings behind some of the most prominent figures and works of poetry. The figures considered here range from Guillaume Apollinaire to Ezra Pound, from Derek Walcott to Joni Mitchell. The book's title is drawn from a poem by Douglas Crase, whose oeuvre is assessed in its final essay. An appendix present an enchanting selection of letters received by Ford from John Ashbery, whose work Ford has edited for the Library of America. These letters date from 1986, when Ford was at work on a PhD thesis on Ashbery, to the final missive Ford received in late 2017.

  • av CJ Howell
    165,-

    Bolivia. 1991. A soldier arrives in the small town of Uyuni. A place where people endure rather than enjoy. Survive than live.The soldier knows they're coming for him. Hunting him down so they can deal their own brand of justice.He needs to get out. To make it to the border and escape what is waiting for him.He's prepared to do anything to survive.Even kill.This is noir fiction at its finest. With characters that you will root for, heartbreak and breathtaking writing, this is a story that will linger in reader's minds long after you've turned the final page.

  • av Adam Temple
    185,-

  • av Tristan Walker
    165,-

    Jason Griffith was a Navy SEAL, but now he's returning to Trinidad. He has been away for a long time with the US Special Forces and reclaiming a place in society is tough.In an attempt to make some quick money, he reunites with some old friends. Only, they're now criminals. Car thieves, to be exact. Jason needs the money though, so he joins with them.That's where things go downhill...

  • av J K Nottingham
    165,-

    It Takes a Killer . . . Foster is not Jasper's father. He's the assassin who killed his family. Jasper was eight years old when he was kidnapped and raised by a killer. Not only raised . . . trained. To Raise a Killer . . . Jasper has now been a trained assassin for decades. Not only does he kill for a living, he has continued in Foster's footsteps - raising a 'family' of his own. Lost souls of the departed. Children who should be dead. Saved by Jasper. To Raise a Killer . . . Now, Jasper must contend with the imminent return of his most accomplished protégé, Gulliver. He decides to tell him everything - his life, how he came to be the man he is now, and what has happened to the family since he left. Only, there is someone else out there determined to stop Jasper and find the lost and missing. And they'll stop at nothing to bring an end to what Jasper has built.

  • av Zephaniah Sole
    155,-

    A Crime In the Land of 7,000 Islands is a powerhouse crime thriller fused with folk tales and the influence of anime. This psychological literary fiction tells the tale of Ikigai Johnson, a Special Agent working out of the FBI's Portland, Oregon field office, who pledges to bring justice to children abused by a monstrous American in the Philippines. Amidst an expertly accurate police procedural, Ikigai recounts her tale to her eleven-year-old daughter through fantastical allegory. Her story exposes the damage that arises from exploitation, inequality, and generational trauma. Exploring the nuances of criminal justice, it enacts the battle between our courage and our submission to fear. It is an important call to act against evil.

  • av David Appelbaum
    165,-

    This is a book of poems to remember those for whom 'time had lapsed.' The poems begin innocently with common collections, rocks or coins, and progressively, become memories that gather the death in the folds of language, to commemorate the passage. The words are most forceful for those closest to the heart of the narrator. The poems mourn a secret bond with each lost one. In the work of grief, special harmonies in poetry open the soul to the transcendent joy of simply being.

  • av Kurt Warner
    185,-

    John Matthews is a janitor in Scranton, Pennsylvania. He talks to his wife, Kristen, as he drives to work. He is exhausted and weary from his difficult and long days and the two discuss their economic and other systemic troubles. John never sees Tara, a security guard with her own struggles, when she loses control of her car and barrels into him on the Scranton highway. John wakes up into a foreign world where a guide named Sophia shows him a new and different society. This world is called Amoena Vieta and Sophia shows him a vivid and exciting new societal structure there.As John hears, sees, and learns these things, his life continues to hang in the balance

  • av Marcus Fedder
    185,-

    The neighbours in Shanghai's most beautiful neighbourhood, the Former French Concession, lead their daily lives, but underneath the surface lurk the troubles of the past, lost love, betrayal, existences destroyed during the Cultural Revolution, dreams, Covid-19 and Jing Zhang, the neighbourhood cat with a love for Philosophy and an understanding of the frailties of his human friends.

  • av Travis Mossotti
    165,-

    Racecar Jesus, winner of the Christopher Smart - Joan Alice Poetry Prize, turns the wheel of western spirituality with equal parts western skepticism, and the poems work toward practical enlightenment the way a bricklayer might; only, what they're building is the opposite edifice. Racecar Jesus converts the sacred into the ordinary--or perhaps, it's the other way around.

  • av Catherine Faurot
    165,-

    Theology of the Broken invites the reader into a garden--a messy, sensual place of potential and despair--and into the Garden, where the myth of Adam and Eve is exploded and rewritten into a tale of separation and communion. The book opens with bulbs that have landed on the author's porch and expands into a hallucinatory chorus of flowers, interspersed with mythic poems upended from all ordinary perspective. In this garden the Fall is division: male from female, body from soul. The poems wander through a landscape alternately lush and desolate until Adam and Eve are united again, momentarily.

  • av Peter Waine
    185,-

    A lively, amusing, insightful and possibly unique account of what it is like to be a Master of an ancient livery company.

  • av Susanna Enso Huang
    165,-

    shines a light on the natural world with precision and wonder. Her writing draws on traditions of Chinese poetry, presenting a world where Sun, Moon and Wind are alive and interacting uniquely with each leaf, blade of grass and tiny flower.

  • av Debasish Lahiri
    159,-

    Moving through the puckered stone of Roman ruins in the present, poet Debasish Lahiri unearths rumpled vestments of the human heart buried there, making the ruins revenant. On the leeward side of heraldry and historical oversight women and men, lovers and misanthropes, unwilling gladiators and unlikely saints, doomed dreamers and gullible aesthetes thrive in the pages of Legion of Lost Letters. These forgotten beings from beyond the millennial horizon ponder the second millennium. The light of these lives, effigies of breathing, made pale and frail by time, resonates Legion of Lost Letters: a light that is not yet loud enough to be heard.

  • av Terry Boyle
    157,-

    In times of uncertainty we desperately crave something to bring comfort to our troubled hearts. Whether it's a song, art, a piece of music or an inspiring poem, we seek to find a temporary place of refuge against the turmoil of the times. This collection of poetry is not a panacea for the ills of modern society. It's not an escape, rather it aims to reflect with candidness the complex, sometimes contradictory, emotions of the human experience. Feelings of despair, hope, love, and anger can assail the mind at times and sometimes it's almost impossible to put those feelings into words. It's my hope that those who read the myriad of emotional shades and colours of my own personal experiences will find a comfort in knowing that we're not alone.

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