Results for 'sarah hall'

202 results
  1. Seascraper
    1. Benjamin Wood

    Seascraper

    A quiet, unassuming book about honest work and modest dreams, about sons and their duty, and those brief, wonderful moments when we glimpse the possibility of living a different life. Benjamin Wood is a magnificent writer and I intend to read everything he has written

    € 13,95
  2. Helm
    1. Sarah Hall

    Helm

    Helm weet niet wanneer Helm doodgaat.Of het binnenkort is, over een poosje of era's later.Ná de mensen. Of vóór hen. Helm is de naam van een wispelturige wind die sinds het begin der tijden door het Eden-dal in het noordwesten van Engeland raast. Dit is het verhaal van deze wind, gezien door zichzelf, door de ogen van degenen die erdoor worden geraakt: de prehistorische NaNay die Helm inzet bij haar zoektocht naar een magische steen; een tovenaar-priester in de middeleeuwen die de wind wil uitdrijven; een victoriaanse ingenieur die probeert Helm in beeld te brengen en een boerendochter die gek is op Helm. Maar in het hier en nu begint klimatoloog Selima, omringd door haar meetinstrumenten op de ‘Helm-berg’, te vrezen dat het einde van de wind nabij is. Helm is een rijkgeschakeerde roman over een unieke natuurkracht en de bijzondere, kwetsbare relatie tussen mens en natuur. 'Als je maar één roman leest, laat dat dan Helm van Sarah Hall zijn.' - The Guardian‘Grote goden, wat is Sarah Hall getalenteerd.’ - David Mitchell

    € 24,99
  3. Helm
    1. Sarah Hall

    Helm

    'Incandescently good.' Sarah Perry

    The wondrous, elemental novel from a 'writer of show-stopping genius' - about nature, people and the sliver of time we have left.

    € 14,99
  4. Hot Milk
    1. Deborah Levy

    Hot Milk

    Unsettling, challenging and gloriously written, Hot Milk by Deborah Levy is the multi-generational story of a hallucinatory sort of summer

    € 13,95
  5. When I Sing, Mountains Dance
    1. Irene Solà

    When I Sing, Mountains Dance

    A ferociously imaginative, polyphonic debut: amid the rugged beauty of the Pyrenees, the mountains' inhabitants - both human and non-human - bear witness to the tragedies that befall one family

    € 13,95
  6. Palace of the Peacock (Faber Editions)
    1. Wilson Harris

    Palace of the Peacock (Faber Editions)

    'Magnificent' - Tsitsi Dangarembga

    The visionary masterpiece, tracing a riverboat crew's dreamlike jungle voyage ...'My new all time favourite book ... As their journey into the interior - their own hearts of darkness - deepens, it assumes a spiritual dimension, guiding them towards a new destination: the Palace of the Peacock ...

    € 11,95
  7. Foster
    1. Claire , Keegan

    Foster

    Claire Keegan's stories are translated into more than thirty-five languages. Antarctica won the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature. Walk the Blue Fields won the Edge Hill Prize for the finest collection of stories published in the British Isles. Foster won the Davy Byrnes Award and in 2020 was chosen by The Times as one of the top fifty works of fiction to be published in the twenty-first century. Small Things Like These was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and the Rathbones Folio Prize, awarded for the best work of literature, regardless of form, to be published in the English language. It won the Kerry Group Irish Novel of the Year Award, the Ambassadors' Prize and the Orwell Prize for Political Fiction.

    € 13,00
  8. It's Not a Cult
    1. Joey Batey

    It's Not a Cult

    'Fierce, freewheeling modern folk horror that thrums with originality' Financial Times

    Darkly comic Northumbrian folk horror in which a terrible band accidentally start a death cult; the debut novel from actor and singer Joey Batey

    € 23,50
  9. On the Calculation of Volume III
    1. Solvej , Balle

    On the Calculation of Volume III

    Tara Selter is no longer alone.Tara Selter has lived the eighteenth of November 1,143 times when she notices a break in the pattern: a man has changed his shirt. The man is Henry Dale, and he remembers all the days that have come before. He knows that time has fallen out of joint. Now they are two of a kind - trapped in the eighteenth of November, but no longer alone.Together they learn to share their present; their voices grow hoarse recounting their small battles against it and their bewilderment at the disintegrating world. Henry sees things differently to Tara: he does not think that time will put itself back together and he does not think that the future will come around. But he makes her realise that she is no longer the same person she was before this fault in time. And he makes her believe that there may be others to find within it.Shortlisted for the International Booker Prize and Winner of the Nordic Council Prize for Literature, On the Calculation of Volume III is the third volume of the poetic, page-turning European masterpiece about one woman's fall through the cracks of time. A New York Times notable book of 2025'Absolutely, absolutely incredible.' Karl Ove Knausgård'Endlessly interesting.' Guardian'A total explosion.' Nicole Krauss'Extraordinary.' Daisy Johnson'Unforgettable.' Hernan Díaz'Breathtaking.' Chetna Maroo'Absolutely marvellous.' Lauren Groff

    € 16,50
  10. Helm
    1. Sarah Hall

    Helm

    'Incandescently good.' Sarah Perry

    The wondrous, elemental new novel from a 'writer of show-stopping genius' - about nature, people and the sliver of time we have left.

    € 20,95
  11. Parasol against the Axe
    1. Helen Oyeyemi

    Parasol against the Axe

    'Oyeyemi's imagination is impressive and vast.' Guardian The glorious new novel from the landmark author - a once-in-a-lifetime trip.

    € 14,95
  12. Seascraper
    1. Benjamin Wood

    Seascraper

    A quiet, unassuming book about honest work and modest dreams, about sons and their duty, and those brief, wonderful moments when we glimpse the possibility of living a different life. Benjamin Wood is a magnificent writer and I intend to read everything he has written

    € 20,95