Filters
-
Theme
- Fiction and Related items
- The Arts
- Biography, Literature and Literary studies
- Society and Social Sciences
- History and Archaeology
- Philosophy and Religion
- Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning
- Language and Linguistics
- Lifestyle, Hobbies and Leisure
- Economics, Finance, Business and Management
-
Product form
-
Language
-
Price
Results for 'hernan diaz'
-
Beartooth
A tale of two brothers in desperate straits and one high-stakes poaching trip in Yellowstone from a Dylan Thomas Prize shortlisted author.
€ 20,95 -
Choice
From Booker-shortlisted author Neel Mukherjee, a devastating new novel that exposes the myths of individual choice. How have we come to live this way? At what cost? Who pays the price?
€ 26,50 -
Ply
A Novel€ 34,95 -
Ply
The Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Trust turns to the future with a novel that examines the place of technology in our collective imagination.
€ 27,50 -
The Radiance
A NEW YORK TIMES NOVEL EVERYONE WILL BE TALKING ABOUT IN 2026 • A TIME MOST ANTICIPATED BOOK OF 2026 “Simply put, a work of genius.” —Abraham Verghese, author of The Covenant of Water A mysterious accident along a country road sparks an awakening and an investigation in Pulitzer Prize–winning playwright and acclaimed novelist Ayad Akhtar’s most daring work yet—a visionary novel of spiritual transformation in an age of fracture—"bordering at times on the ineffable" (Mary Gaitskill).When a hit-and-run shatters more than his body, a writer is caught between revelation and madness as an uncanny pull toward a brilliant campus colleague ensnares him in a scandal that threatens to destroy them both. What begins as a provocative portrait of academic and cultural warfare deepens into erotic entanglement, the exposure of a family secret, and the mystery surrounding the narrator’s accident—both the violence and its aftermath. Moving between rural America and Europe, Islam and Christianity, the intimate and the metaphysical, The Radiance is of our American moment and beyond it—asking not only what has broken, but what radiance remains.
€ 27,50 -
Sakina's Kiss
Shortlisted for the James Tait Black Prize for FictionA quiveringly taut family fuelled by an urgent mystery and compressed into 180 pages, this is another bravura performance from 'India's finest writer' (Herald)
€ 17,95 -
May Our Joy Endure
Sharp, provocative... Embeds ever-timely themes - greed, hypocrisy, privilege - in a narrative that blends satire and lyricism, whimsy and voyeurism... You won't be able to look away
€ 26,50 -
Eugene Devéria D'après Des Documents Originaux, 1805-1865...
€ 37,50 -
Doom Patterns
Latinx Speculations and the Aesthetics of Violence“Maia Gil’AdÍ approaches Latinx speculative fiction as a paradigm to read through Latinx studies, posing sharp questions that warrant serious consideration. By putting works that normally would not be placed in conversation with each other, such as Colson Whitehead’s Zone One and Cristina GarcÍa’s Dreaming in Cuban, Gil’AdÍ not only sheds new light on these works; she generates a new conversation altogether. Her innovative interventions make Doom Patterns a bold, generative, and liberating move for Latinx studies.” - Catherine S. Ramírez, author of (Assimilation: An Alternative History) “Maia Gil’AdÍ troubles the bounds of Latinx literature. Across sumptuous readings of speculative fiction, she reveals ‘doom patterns’ of recurrent violence not only in literature but as the cohering logic of a hemispheric latinidad. In so doing, she problematizes concepts and practices of canonicity, reframes theorizations of the borderlands, and challenges conventions for taxonomies of Latinx literature. Doom Patterns is essential reading for scholars of Latinx literature, multiethnic literature, English, and Latinx studies and American studies more broadly.” - Leticia Alvarado, author of (Abject Performances: Aesthetic Strategies in Latino Cultural Production)
€ 116,50 -
In the Distance
€ 32,95 -
Max Dupain: A portrait of the new landmark biography of Australia's most iconic photographer from leading curator and award-winning author of OLIVE COTTON
Helen Ennis writes on Australian photography and photographers. She was formerly Curator of Photography at the National Gallery of Australia and Director of the Centre for Art History and Art Theory and Sir William Dobell Chair of Art History at the ANU School of Art & Design; she is currently Emeritus Professor. She has curated numerous exhibitions for the National Gallery of Australia, the National Portrait Gallery and the National Library of Australia. Her many books include Margaret Michaelis: Love, loss and photography (2005), winner of the 2006 Victorian Premier's Literary Award for Non-Fiction, and Olive Cotton: A life in photography (2019), winner of the 2020 Queensland Literary Award for Non-Fiction, the 2022 Adelaide Festival Award for Non-Fiction, and the 2020 Magarey Medal for Biography. She is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Humanities and was awarded the J. Dudley Johnston Medal by the British Royal Photographic Society in 2021. www.helenennis.com
€ 55,50 -
The Volcano Daughters
Set in 20th-century El Salvador, The Volcano Daughters is a powerful novel about sisterhood, art, and a community of women who refuse to be silenced.
€ 23,50