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  • av Nicholas & ROYLE
    145,-

    Best British Short Stories invites you to judge a book by its cover - or more accurately, by its title. This new series aims to reprint the best short stories published in the previous calendar year by British writers, whether based in the UK or elsewhere.

  •  
    145,-

    Best British Short Stories invites you to judge a book by its cover - or more accurately, by its title. This new series aims to reprint the best short stories published in the previous calendar year by British writers, whether based in the UK or elsewhere.

  • av Ken Evans
    155,-

    The collection addresses shared, topical challenges like identity, gender roles, belonging and family, at a time of shifting, heightened uncertainty. Themes which affect all of us like toxic masculinity, family disfunction, war, and climate, in fiercely imaginative, jagged, yet compassionate, sometimes absurdist, surreal fashion.

  • av Julian Stannard
    155,-

    These are not common-or-garden poems. They don't behave like poems at all. They sing, they dance, they make the reader wince, they get under the skin. Reading New And Selected Poems is like going to a smoke-filled jazz club, or the back streets of a beautiful crazy Italian city. By the time you get home you'll never be the same.

  • av Neil Campbell
    145,-

    Campbell's splendidly funny and touching work gives voice to people you don't hear much of in fiction: the working class of Manchester. A working class of Manchester in danger of being forgotten as the city's skyscrapers spread high and wide. A Manchester where Hacienda cliches turn into corporate nightmares.

  • av Kerry Hadley-Pryce
    155,-

    Lie of the Land is a dark, domestic literary thriller set in the Black Country, in the Midlands, UK - an example of Black Country Noir - with themes of toxic relationships, secrets and deceit exacerbated by a judgmental narrative voice which propels the plot to its even darker resolution.

  •  
    155,-

    Best British Short Stories invites you to judge a book by its cover - or more accurately, by its title. This new series aims to reprint the best short stories published in the previous calendar year by British writers, whether based in the UK or elsewhere.

  • av Xan Brooks
    155,-

    Spring 1927. The birth of popular music. John Coughlin is a song-catcher from New York who has been sent to Appalachia to source and record the local hill-country musicians. His assignment leads him to small-town Tennessee where he oversees the recording session that will establish his reputation.

  • av Pascale Petit
    155,-

    Pascale Petit's My Hummingbird Father is a beautifully lyrical debut novel in dialogue with Pascale's Ondaatje and Laurel Prize-winning poetry collection, Mama Amazonica.

  • av Vesna Main
    155,-

    Claire Meadows, 92, reminiscences about her life, her failed ambition to become a concert pianist, her missed opportunity to have a child, her friends and lovers, mostly dead, she is troubled by the part she played, consciously and deliberately, in the death of her husband.

  • av Will Wiles
    145,-

    A debut collection of weird tales from Will Wiles, the award-winning author of Care of Wooden Floors, The Way Inn and Plume.

  • av Mr David Briggs
    155,-

    David Briggs' new collection offers a midlife counterpart to the Oedipus complex exploring themes of family ties, nostalgia and retreat, ageing and mortality, acts of memorial and the impulse towards hospitality.

  • av Paul Pickering
    175,-

    Pickering's extraordinary wartime novel traces the violent exploits of Operation Lucy - centred on the mysterious 'Hyman Kaplan'.

  • av Bill Broady
    175,-

    A major work of historical and political fiction exploring the birth of the Independent Labour Party, its development in the early twentieth century and its fortunes in the interwar years. Including appearances from every leading socialist of the age, it centres upon the historical figures of Fred Jowett, Philip Snowden and Victor Grayson.

  • av Mr Christopher Burns
    145,-

    An academic visits a town for the first time, but is told he has lived there before; an elderly mother becomes overwhelmed by a sensual past; these are the sharply observed elements to three of the seventeen outstanding stories in this unforgettable collection by the acclaimed novelist Christopher Burns.

  • av Judith Heneghan
    155,-

    Birdeye is a novel which shows us what the hippy dream looks like fifty years on, when the secrets which were masked by free spirit and a determined nonconformism force their way to the surface.

  • av Peter Daniels
    155,-

    Peter DanielsâEUR(TM) new collection explores gay liaisons and relationships, as well as ageing and mortality. The title poem borrows from Yeats, âEURoeThat is no country for old men. The young / In one another's armsâEUR? and explores wryly what we can hope for from love in later years.

  • av Guy Ware
    155,-

    Denis Klamm, feckless scion of two former Leaders, returns to the Island for his father's funeral, only to find it sinking. Or the sea rising - it depends what you believe. Either way, they're all going to drown - unless the young, idealistic and newly-elected Leader, Jessica King, really is the saviour long foretold by Our Island Story.

  • av Nicholas Royle
    155,-

    The 'shadow line' is a term Royle uses to describe the faint line on the top edge of the text block that allows him to see whether a book on a shelf contains an inclusion - those items inserted into books and long forgotten.

  •  
    155,-

    Best British Short Stories invites you to judge a book by its cover - or more accurately, by its title. This new series aims to reprint the best short stories published in the previous calendar year by British writers, whether based in the UK or elsewhere.

  • av Kaddy Benyon
    155,-

    Robbergirls is a Sapphic retelling of Hans Christian Andersn's fairy tale, The Snow Queen. It was inspired by a childhood fear of, and desire for, the character of the Robbergirl who both taunts and aids Gerda in her search for her missing playmate, Kay.

  • av Martyn Crucefix
    155,-

  • av Richard Skinner
    155,-

  • av Emma Simon
    155,-

    Emma Simon‿s wide-ranging, work explores how strange and surreal the everyday can be and how real life and stories tend to bleed into one another. These poems ‿ mysterious, mythic, magical ‿ remain deeply accessible, while being witty and serious. An unforgettable debut collection.

  • av Trevor Mark Thomas
    155,-

  • av Julian Stannard
    155,-

    Please Don't Bomb the Ghost of my Brother is haunted by loss yet these poems defy despair by stepping emphatically into the liberating realm of strangeness.

  • av Ms Becky Varley-Winter
    155,-

    Becky Varley Winter's striking debut explores themes of daring, danger and risk in poems that are packed with imagery from the natural world. Complex, hypnotic, memorable - this collection introduces a significant new voice.

  • av Tony Williams
    175,-

    Comic, grotesque, lyrical, and immensely readable, Williams's picaresque medieval fantasy is a reader's delight. A sweeping yarn through the dark ages filled with rogues, lovers, murderers, witchcraft, failed promise, wisdom and regret.

  • av David Frankel
    145,-

    In Forgetting Is How We Survive, people are haunted by ghosts of the past, tormented by doppelgangers and pining for lost futures. Each character faces a turning point - an event that will move their life from one path to another, and every event casts a shadow.

  • av David Gaffney
    145,-

    Haunting and funny stories that explore the theme of town versus country with a dark humour and a surreal spin.

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