Fiction: New arrivals Spring 2007
James Hamilton-Patterson: Amazing Disgrace. €11,30
The even funnier sequel to the hugely acclaimed Cooking with Fernet Branca, Amazing Disgrace follows the further misadventures of hero Gerald Samper, ghostwriter to the illiterate stars.
Gerald is now writing the autobiography of Millie Cleat, a one-armed sailor, whose around-the-world voyage has made her the toast of Britain. He pines for greater things, however, and would prefer to write memoires of Max Christ, the celebrated conductor. As he schemes to land this unattainable catch, he finds himself caught up in avery strange, very tangled, and very irresistible plot...
Naomi Alderman: Disobedience € 11,30
Orange Award for New Writers 2006.
By the age of 32, Ronit has left London and transformed her life. She has become a cigarette-smoking, wise-cracking, New York career woman, who is in love with a married man.
But when Ronit’s father dies she is called back into the very different world of her childhood, a world she thought she had left far behind. The orthodox Jewish suburb of Hendon, north London is outraged by Ronit and her provocative ways. But Ronit is shocked too by the confrontation with her past. And when she meets up with her childhood girlfriend Esti, she is forced to think again about what she has left behind.
Marina Lewycka: Two Caravans € 20,50
An idyll of the English countryside: a beautiful summer's evening in a Kent field, and around their two caravans a little group of strawberry pickers is getting ready to celebrate a birthday.
But who picks our strawberries these days? The Ukrainians: Irina, just off the coach from Kiev, and eager to improve her excellent English and find true love with a romantic Englishman; Andriy, the miner's son from the other Ukraine; the Poles: Bob Dylan fan, Tomasz, (whose smelly trainers will soon punish those in the men's caravan), Yola, the petite, voluptuous gangmistress and her religious niece Marta, who finds the wild mushrooms to cook with the sliced loaf; then there is Vitaly, king of the new mobilfon world of the shiny new Eastern Europe; two Chinese girls; Emanuel, the round eyed eighteen-year-old from Malawi, come to England to look for his sister. And although he can't exactly help pick strawberries, there's also the Dog...
But these are a group leading dangerous lives - exploitative employers, British regulations and gang masters with guns will all threaten their existence as they take to the caravan road until each of them peels off to find their destiny.
Hilarious, gritty, moving, and slapstick by turns Two Caravans has every bit of the extraordinary distinctiveness and wit and heart that made A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian so successful.
The even funnier sequel to the hugely acclaimed Cooking with Fernet Branca, Amazing Disgrace follows the further misadventures of hero Gerald Samper, ghostwriter to the illiterate stars.
Gerald is now writing the autobiography of Millie Cleat, a one-armed sailor, whose around-the-world voyage has made her the toast of Britain. He pines for greater things, however, and would prefer to write memoires of Max Christ, the celebrated conductor. As he schemes to land this unattainable catch, he finds himself caught up in avery strange, very tangled, and very irresistible plot...
Naomi Alderman: Disobedience € 11,30
Orange Award for New Writers 2006.
By the age of 32, Ronit has left London and transformed her life. She has become a cigarette-smoking, wise-cracking, New York career woman, who is in love with a married man.
But when Ronit’s father dies she is called back into the very different world of her childhood, a world she thought she had left far behind. The orthodox Jewish suburb of Hendon, north London is outraged by Ronit and her provocative ways. But Ronit is shocked too by the confrontation with her past. And when she meets up with her childhood girlfriend Esti, she is forced to think again about what she has left behind.
Marina Lewycka: Two Caravans € 20,50
An idyll of the English countryside: a beautiful summer's evening in a Kent field, and around their two caravans a little group of strawberry pickers is getting ready to celebrate a birthday.
But who picks our strawberries these days? The Ukrainians: Irina, just off the coach from Kiev, and eager to improve her excellent English and find true love with a romantic Englishman; Andriy, the miner's son from the other Ukraine; the Poles: Bob Dylan fan, Tomasz, (whose smelly trainers will soon punish those in the men's caravan), Yola, the petite, voluptuous gangmistress and her religious niece Marta, who finds the wild mushrooms to cook with the sliced loaf; then there is Vitaly, king of the new mobilfon world of the shiny new Eastern Europe; two Chinese girls; Emanuel, the round eyed eighteen-year-old from Malawi, come to England to look for his sister. And although he can't exactly help pick strawberries, there's also the Dog...
But these are a group leading dangerous lives - exploitative employers, British regulations and gang masters with guns will all threaten their existence as they take to the caravan road until each of them peels off to find their destiny.
Hilarious, gritty, moving, and slapstick by turns Two Caravans has every bit of the extraordinary distinctiveness and wit and heart that made A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian so successful.
MissChilli - 13. Apr, 11:00
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