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Just
in for September 2008
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The Act
of Love
Howard Jacobson
HB
£17.99
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Felix Quinn calls himself a happy man. He runs one of the oldest
antiquarian bookshops in London and his wife, Marisa, is unfaithful
to him. All husbands, Felix maintains, secretly want their wives to
be unfaithful to them. Felix hasn't always thought this way. From
the moment of his first boyhood rejection, surviving the shattering
effects of love and jealousy had been the study of his life. But an
event occurs while he is honeymooning with Marisa in Florida that
changes all that. At a stroke he goes from dreading the thought of
someone else's hands on the woman he loves to thinking about nothing
else. From now on he is jealousy's slave and will know no peace
until his wife betrays him, and then betrays him again. But how can
it be called betrayal if it is what he wants? Enter Marius into
Marisa's affections. And now Felix must wonder if he really is a
happy man. This is a story about agony-addiction; but it is also
about the nature of desire itself, the exquisiteness of loss, and
the
universality of the impulse - whether a jealous husband's or an
avid reader's - to play the voyeur, to probe and question, to
want to know, day after day, page after page, who is doing
what to whom and what
will happen next.
Shocking, unashamedly perverse, mordantly funny, and at the last heartbreaking,
"The Act of Love" tackles one of the last taboos
of the erotic life. No husband who reads this novel will ever feel
the same about his wife again. And no wife will be sure
she really knows her husband
.
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Exit
Ghost
Philip Roth
PB £7.99
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Like Rip Van Winkle returning to his hometown to find
that all has changed, Nathan Zuckerman comes back to New York, the
city he left eleven years before. Alone on his New England mountain,
Zuckerman has been nothing but a writer: no voices, no media, no
terrorist threats, no women, no news, no tasks other than his work
and the enduring of old age. Walking the streets like a revenant, he
quickly makes three connections that explode his carefully protected
solitude. One is with a young couple with whom, in
a rash moment, he offers to swap homes. They will flee
post-9/11
Manhattan for his country refuge, and he will
return to city life. But from the time he meets
them, Zuckerman also wants to swap his solitude for
the erotic challenge of the young woman, Jaime, whose allure draws
him back to all that he thought he had left behind: intimacy, the
vibrant play of heart and body.The second connection is with a figure from
Zuckerman's youth, Amy Bellette, companion and muse to
Zuckerman's first literary hero, E.I.
Lonoff. The once irresistible Amy is now an old woman
depleted by illness, guarding the memory of that grandly austere
American writer who showed Nathan the solitary path to a writing vocation.
The third connection is with Lonoff's would-be biographer, a young literary
hound who will do and say nearly anything to
get to Lonoff's "great secret". Suddenly involved, as he never wanted
or intended to be involved again, with love, mourning, desire, and animosity, Zuckerman plays
out an interior drama of vivid and poignant
possibilities.
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The Age of Turbulence
Alan Greenspan
PB £10.99
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The most remarkable thing that happened to
the world economy after 9/11 was ...nothing. What would have once
meant a crippling shock to the system was absorbed astonishingly quickly, partly
due
to the
efforts of the then Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, Alan
Greenspan. The post 9/11 global economy is a new and
turbulent system - vastly more flexible, resilient, open, self-directing, and fast-changing
than it was even twenty years ago. "The Age of Turbulence" is
an incomparable reckoning with the nature of this new world
- how we got here, what we're living
through, and what lies over the horizon, for good or
ill, channelled through Greenspan's own experiences working in the
command room of the global economy for longer and with greater
effect than any other single living figure.
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A Thousand Splendid Suns
Khaled Hosseini
PB £7.99
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Mariam is only fifteen when
she is sent to Kabul to marry Rasheed. Nearly two decades later,
a friendship grows between Mariam and a local teenager, Laila,
as strong as the ties between mother and daughter. When the Taliban take
over, life becomes a desperate struggle against starvation, brutality and
fear. Yet love can move a person to act in unexpected
ways, and lead them to overcome the most daunting obstacles with
a startling heroism.
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Chicago
Alaa Al Aswany
HB
£14.99
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Sex, money, and politics are the driving forces of society in
this new novel from bestselling author Alaa Al Aswany. A medley of
Egyptian and American lives collides on the campus of the University
of Illinois Medical Center in a post-9/11 Chicago, and crises of
identity abound. Among the players are an atheistic
anti-establishment American professor of the sixties generation,
whose relationship with a younger African-American woman becomes a
moving target for intolerance; a veiled Ph.D. candidate whose
conviction in the code of her traditional upbringing is shaken by
her exposure to American society; an emigre who has fervently
embraced his new American identity, but who cannot escape his Egyptian roots when faced
with the issue of his daughter's 'honour'; an Egyptian State Security
informant who spouts religious doctrines while hankering after money
and power; and a dissident student poet who comes to
America with the sole aim of financing his literary aspirations,
but whose experience in Chicago turns out to be more than
he bargained for.This tightly plotted page-turner is set far from the downtown Cairo
of Al Aswany's "The Yacoubian Building", but is no
less unflinching an examination of contemporary Egyptian
lives.
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The Book
of Other People
Zadie Smith
PB £7.99
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"The Book of Other People" is just that: a book
of other people. Open its covers and you'll
make a whole host of new acquaintances. Nick Hornby
and Posy Simmonds present the ever-diverging writing life
of Jamie Johnson; Hari Kunzru twitches open his net
curtains to reveal the irrepressible Magda Mandela (at 4:30a.m., in her
lime-green thong); Jonathan Safran Foer's Grandmother offers cookies
to sweeten the tale of her heart scan; and Dave Eggers, George
Saunders, David Mitchell, Colm Toibin, A.M.Homes, Chris Ware
and many more each have someone to introduce to you, too. With an
introduction by Zadie Smith and brand-new stories from over twenty
of the best writers of their generation from both sides of the
Atlantic, "The Book of Other People" is as dazzling and inventive as
its authors, and as vivid and wide-ranging as its characters.
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The Whisperers
Orlando Figes
PB £10.99
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Drawing on a huge range of sources
- letters, memoirs, conversations - Orlando Figes
tells the story of how Russians tried to endure life
under Stalin. Those who shaped the political system became,
very frequently, its victims. Those who were its
victims were frequently quite blameless. "The Whisperers" recreates the sort of
maze in which Russians found themselves, where an unwitting wrong turn
could either destroy a family or, perversely, later save it: a society
in which everyone spoke in whispers - whether to protect themselves,
their families, neighbours or friends - or to inform on
them.
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White Tiger
Aravind
Adiga
HB £12.99
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Balram
Halwai is the White Tiger - the smartest boy in his village. His
family is too poor for him to afford for him to finish school and he
has to work in a teashop, breaking coals and wiping tables. But
Balram gets his break when a rich man hires him as a chauffeur, and
takes him to live in Delhi.The city is a
revelation. As he drives his master to shopping malls and call
centres, Balram becomes increasingly aware of immense wealth and
opportunity all around him, while knowing that he will never be able
to gain access to that world. As Balram broods over his situation,
he realizes that there is only one way he can become part of this
glamorous new India - by murdering his master."The White Tiger"
presents a raw and unromanticised India, both thrilling and shocking
- from the desperate, almost lawless villages along the Ganges, to
the booming Wild South of Bangalore and its technology and
outsourcing centres. The first-person confession
of a murderer, "The White Tiger" is as compelling for its subject
matter as for the voice of its narrator - amoral, cynical,
unrepentant, yet deeply endearing.
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Exit Music
Ian
Rankin
PB £7.99
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It's late autumn in Edinburgh and late autumn
in the career of Detective Inspector John Rebus. As he tries to tie
up some loose ends before retirement, a murder case intrudes. A
dissident Russian poet has been found dead in what looks like a
mugging gone wrong. By apparent coincidence, a high-level delegation
of Russian businessmen is
in town - and everyone is determined that the
case should be closed quickly and clinically. But the further they dig,
the more Rebus and DS Siobhan Clarke become convinced that they are dealing
with something more
than a random attack - especially after
a particularly nasty second killing. Meanwhile, a brutal and premeditated assault on a
local gangster sees Rebus in the frame.
Has the Inspector taken a step too far in tying
up those loose ends? Only a few days shy of the end to his
long, inglorious career, will Rebus even make it that
far?
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A Choice of Enemies
Lawrence Freedman
HB
£20.00
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The United States is locked into three prolonged conflicts
without much hope of early resolution. Iran is pursuing a nuclear programme; the aftermath
of the overthrow of Saddam Hussein has seen unrelenting
intercommunal violence; and the Taliban have got back into Afghanistan.
George W.Bush will almost
certainly leave office without solving any of these big foreign
policy issues that have defined his presidency. Lawrence Freedman,
one of our most distinguished historians of 20th century military
and political strategy, teases out the roots of each engagement over
the last thirty years and demonstrates with clarity and scholarship
the influence of these conflicts upon each other. How is it that the
US manages to find itself fighting on three different fronts?
Freedman supplies a context to recent events and warns against easy
assumptions: neo-conservatives, supporters of Israel and the hawks
are not the sole reasons for the failure to develop a viable foreign
policy in the Middle East. The story is
infinitely more complex and is often marked by great drama. First,
the countries in dispute with America are not themselves natural
allies; and second, their enmity was not, at first, America's
choice. Until the Shah went into exile in 1979 Iran had been a
pillar of US security policy...Third, the region's problems cannot
all be traced to the Arab-Israeli dispute. Unique in its focus, this book will offer not only new
revelations but also remind us of what has been forgotten or has
never been put in context.
Arrivals for August
2008
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2008
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2008
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2008
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2008
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