Archive for the ‘Literary Fiction’ Category

A Thousand Splendid Suns

Thursday, August 9th, 2007

thousand-splendid-suns.jpgThousand Splendid Suns
Khaled Hosseini

Description :
The highly anticipated and breathtaking new novel by the author of the internationally best-selling novel The Kite Runner.

This is the story of an unusual and lifelong friendship between two Afghan women, spanning from the idyllic mid 1950s to post-September 11 Kabul. Bound by tragedy and fate, by political circumstance and custom, the two women live through the Soviet war, the harrowing days of the Afghan civil war and the rule of the Taliban. Yet even as their world unravels around them and innocence is shattered, they find that there, amidst the ruins, is the possibility for hope, meaning and unexpected grace.
About the Author :
Khaled Hosseini was born in Afghanistan and his family received political asylum in the USA in 1980. He is author of the internationally best-selling novel The Kite Runner. Khaled is a doctor and lives in California.

ISBN : 9780747582977
Australian Price : $32.95 Inc. GST
Number of pages : 384
Publication Date : June, 2007
Subject : Fiction – Adult

The Blood of Flowers by Anita Amirrezvani

Saturday, April 28th, 2007

Set in seventeenth-century Iran, THE BLOOD OF FLOWERS is the powerful and haunting story of a young girl’s journey from innocence to adulthood.The novel begins in the 1620s in a remote village where the narrator (whose name, in the Iranian storytelling tradition, we are never to know) lives with her mother and rug-maker father. On theblood-of-flowers.jpg sudden death of her father our heroine and her mother fall upon hard times and are forced to travel to the bustling, beautiful, exotic city of Isfahan where relatives take them in. Everything is new: the grudging charity of her aunt, the encouragement of her uncle, one of the finest carpet-makers in the world, who begins to teach her his craft, the treacherous friendship of the daughter of rich neighbours. And there’s an adventure ahead which will introduce her to the sensual side of life as well as to the cruelty of betrayal and rejection before she finds her way to contentment and possibly, even, to happiness.

ISBN 0755334205 (978-075-533420-9)
RRP $32.95 May 2007
Headline Paperback Cut Down C

Mister Pip by Lloyd Jones

Wednesday, March 7th, 2007
 

You cannot pretend to read a book. Your eyes will give you away. So will yourJacket Mister Pip breathing. A person entranced by a book simply forgets to breathe. The house can catch alight and a reader deep in a book will not look up until the wallpaper is in flames.

After the trouble starts and the soldiers arrive on Matilda’s tropical island, only one white person stays behind. Mr Watts wears a red nose and pulls his wife around on a trolley. The kids call him Pop Eye. But there is no one else to teach them their lessons. Mr Watts begins to read aloud to the class from his battered copy of Great Expectations, a book by his friend Mr Dickens.

Soon Dickens’ hero Pip starts to come alive for Matilda. She writes his name in the sand and decorates it with shells. Pip becomes as real to her as her own mother, and the greatest friendship of her life has begun.

But Matilda is not the only one who believes in Pip. And, on an island at war, the power of the imagination can be a dangerously provocative thing.

Praise for Mister Pip

‘Mister Pip is a rare, original and truly beautiful novel. It reminds us that every act of reading and telling is a transformation, and that stories, even painful ones, may carry possibilities of redemption.’
Gail Jones

‘As compelling as a fairytale—beautiful, shocking and profound.’
Helen Garner

‘Roll the drums. Flourish the trumpets. Release the pigeons. Yes, the fanfare accompanying Lloyd Jones’ new novel is well-deserved…It reads like the effortless soar and dip of a grand piece of music, thrilling singular voices, the darker, moving chorus, the blend of the light and shade, the thread of grief urgent in every beat and the occasional faint, lingering note of hope…Jones is matchless…Read this novel and Mr Watts, and perhaps Matilda, will migrate instantly into your heart.’
Age

 

About the Author
Lloyd Jones was born in New Zealand in 1955. He is the author of nine previous novels and collections of stories, which include the award-winning The Book of Fame, Biografi, a New York Times Notable Book, Choo Woo, Here at the End of the World We Learn to Dance and Paint Your Wife. Lloyd Jones lives in Wellington.

Paperback (C format) | ISBN: 1 921145 57 9 | RRP: $29.95 | 256pp

Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox by Maggie O’Farrell

Monday, March 5th, 2007

September 2006

A significant departure for Maggie O’Farrell in terms of maturity and style, THEJacket Esme Lennox VANISHING ACT OF ESME LENNOX will be one of the unmissable publishing events of 2006.Ladies and gentlemen behold. It is most important to keep yourself very still. Even breathing can remind them that you are there, so only very short, very shallow breaths. Just enough to stay alive. Set between the 1930s, and the present, Maggie O’Farrell’s new novel is the story of Esme, a woman edited out of her family’s history, and of the secrets that come to light when, sixty years later, she is released from care, and a young woman, Iris, discovers the great aunt she never knew she had.The mystery that unfolds is the heartbreaking tale of two sisters in colonial India and 1930s Edinburgh – of the loneliness that binds them together and the rivalries that drive them apart, and lead one of them to a shocking betrayal.

Saturday by Ian McEwan (January 2005)

Monday, March 5th, 2007

SATURDAY

Ian McEwan

The brilliant new novel by one of Britain’s finest writers.Jacket Saturday

Description of the Book

Saturday, February 15, 2003. Henry Perowne is a contented man – a successful neurosurgeon, the devoted husband of Rosalind, a newspaper lawyer, and proud father of two grown-up children, one a promising poet, the other a talented blues musician. Unusually, he wakes before dawn, drawn to the window of his bedroom and filled with a growing unease. What troubles him as he looks out at the night sky is the state of the world – the impending war against Iraq, a gathering pessimism since 9/11, and a fear that his city, its openness and diversity, and his happy family life are under threat.
Later, Perowne makes his way to his weekly squash game through London streets filled with hundreds of thousands of anti-war protestors. A minor car accident brings him into a confrontation with Baxter, a fidgety, aggressive, young man, on the edge of violence. To Perowne’s professional eye, there appears to be something profoundly wrong with him.
Towards the end of a day rich in incident and filled with Perowne’s celebrations of life’s pleasures – music, food, love, the exhilarations of sport and the satisfactions of exacting work – his family gathers for a reunion. But with the sudden appearance of Baxter, Perowne’s earlier fears seem about to be realised.
Ian McEwan’s last novel, ATONEMENT, was hailed as a masterpiece all over the world. SATURDAY shares its confident, graceful prose and its remarkable perceptiveness, but is perhaps even more dramatically compelling, showing how life can change in an instant, for better or for worse. It is the work of a writer at the very height of his powers.

Review
PRAISE FOR AMSTERDAM:
‘Funnier than anything McEwan has written before, though just as lethal.’ The New York Review of Books

‘Never mind the width, feel the quality. McEwan miraculously creates an effect of spaciousness within his miniature dimensions. It is a watchmaker’s art.’ The Sunday Times

PRAISE FOR ATONEMENT:
‘It is wonderful for a novelist to display such ambition, but even more wonderful when that ambition is so beautifully realised.’ Malcolm Knox, Sydney Morning Herald

‘ … the writing throughout Atonement is consistently beautiful.’ Caroline Hughes, Courier Mail

‘ It’s hard not to be in awe on Atonement. It is everything you could hope for and want in a novel, and yet it’s also full of surprises and questions.’ David Cohen, West Australian

‘ … a compelling novel and a worthy successor to McEwan’s Booker Prize-winning Amsterdam…’ Gaby Naher, HQ

The Turning by Tim Winton (December 2004)

Monday, March 5th, 2007

In the 1980s Tim Winton made his mark with tough, spare stories about youth and Jacket Turningpromise, of early parenthood and the challenges of loyalty. Now, almost twenty years since his last collection, he returns to the form with seventeen overlapping stories of second thoughts and mid-life regret set in the brooding small-town world of coastal Western Australia. Here are turnings of all kinds – changes of heart, nasty surprises, slow awakenings, sudden detours – where people struggle against the terrible weight of the past and challenge the lives they’ve made for themselves.Beautifully crafted, and as tender as they are confronting, these elegiac stories examine the darkness and frailty of ordinary people and celebrate the moments when the light shines through.From the internationally acclaimed and bestselling author of Dirt Music comes an outstanding work of fiction that will resonate with readers everywhere.Biography:
Born in Perth in 1960, Tim Winton is the author of thirteen books, including novels, short stories, non-fiction and books for children. He began publishing fiction in his teens and his first novel, An Open Swimmer, won the 1981 Australian/Vogel Prize. He has twice won the Miles Franklin Award, for Shallows in 1984 and for Cloudstreet in 1991, and his other awards include the Banjo Prize, the WA Premier’s Prize, the DEO Gloria Award (UK), the Marten Bequest and the Wilderness Society Environment Award. In 1995 The Riders was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. Dirt Music- shortlisted for the Booker Prize, winner of Miles Franklin Literary award and more – confirms Tim’s status as one of the finest novelists of his generation. Tim Winton has lived in Greece, France and Ireland. He lives in Western Australia with his wife and three children.