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Selected Poems

50.00 

Selected Poems by Lord Byron (Penguin Classics) — essential Byron, from the early poems that made him famous to the mature brilliance of Don Juan. Includes ‘Childe Harold’, the Hebrew Melodies, and key passages from his comic masterpiece. The ideal introduction to one of Romanticism’s most dazzling voices.

Selected Poems

50.00 

Selected Poems by John Keats (Penguin Classics) — the great odes, narrative poems, and celebrated lyrics in a compact annotated edition. The ideal introduction to one of the supreme poets in the English tradition. Edited by John Barnard, with full scholarly notes.

The Complete Poems

60.00 

The Complete Poems by Thomas Wyatt (Penguin Classics) — the entire surviving work of the founder of the English lyric tradition, who introduced the Petrarchan sonnet into English at Henry VIII’s court. Remarkable for sophistication and emotional directness. The standard scholarly edition, edited by R.A. Rebholz.

The Complete Poems

55.00 

The Complete Poems by John Keats (Penguin Classics) — the complete poetic achievement of one of the English language’s most beloved poets. Includes the great odes, narrative poems, and lyric poetry, with full scholarly apparatus. Edited by John Barnard — the standard academic text.

The Inheritance of Rome: A History of Europe 400-1000

90.00 

The Inheritance of Rome by Chris Wickham (Penguin) — the definitive account of early medieval Europe, 400–1000 AD. Challenging the ‘Dark Ages’ narrative, Wickham traces six centuries of transformation across post-Roman Europe with scholarly authority and narrative accessibility. Part of the Penguin History of Europe series.

Gulag: A History

60.00 

Gulag: A History by Anne Applebaum (Penguin) — the Pulitzer Prize-winning definitive account of the Soviet forced labour camp system. Eighteen million prisoners, millions of deaths — traced from Lenin to Khrushchev with the authority of a historian and the compulsive readability of a journalist. Essential reading.

The Consolations of Philosophy

55.00 

The Consolations of Philosophy by Alain de Botton (Penguin) — six great philosophers applied to six modern sources of unhappiness. Socrates, Epicurus, Seneca, Montaigne, Schopenhauer, and Nietzsche each offer a different remedy for our most common sorrows. Intelligent, witty, and genuinely useful.

Going to Meet the Man

46.00 

Going to Meet the Man by James Baldwin (Penguin) — his only short story collection. Eight stories examining race, sexuality, and identity with unsurpassed moral clarity, dominated by the extraordinary title story in which Baldwin enters a white Southern deputy’s consciousness with radical empathy. Essential Baldwin.

Nobody Knows My Name

46.00 

Nobody Knows My Name by James Baldwin (Penguin) — an essential essay collection from one of the twentieth century’s greatest prose writers. Moving between Harlem, the American South, and the condition of the Black artist, these early civil rights-era essays crackle with moral intelligence and controlled fury.

The Secret History

60.00 

The Secret History by Donna Tartt (Penguin) — the debut novel that invented the dark academic genre. Richard Papen’s entanglement with a secretive group of Greek students at a Vermont college ends in murder. Rich, seductive, and atmospherically perfect — one of the most gripping thrillers of its generation.

Jailbird

46.00 

Jailbird by Kurt Vonnegut (Vintage) — a darkly comic political novel narrated by minor Watergate figure Walter Starbuck after his prison release. Drawing on American labour history and McCarthyism, it explores political conscience and its costs with Vonnegut’s characteristic blend of tenderness, humour, and anger.

Hocus Pocus

46.00 

Hocus Pocus by Kurt Vonnegut (Vintage) — narrated by Vietnam veteran and prison warden Eugene Debs Hartke from a prison cell, it is a dark, funny portrait of America in decline. Vonnegut’s compassion, anger, and moral intelligence at full power. Essential late Vonnegut.

Breakfast of Champions

46.00 

Breakfast of Champions by Kurt Vonnegut (Vintage) — one of the most formally inventive American satirical novels. Vonnegut brings together the unhinged Dwayne Hoover and the sci-fi writer Kilgore Trout in a work illustrated with his own drawings — a devastating, funny critique of consumerism and the stories America tells itself.

The Tennis Partner

46.00 

The Tennis Partner by Abraham Verghese (Vintage) — a remarkable memoir about friendship, medicine, and addiction. Verghese’s friendship with David Smith, a brilliant medical student fighting cocaine addiction, is told with clinical precision and emotional intelligence. One of the finest books about addiction in recent American literature.

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

46.00 

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon (Vintage) — narrated by Christopher Boone, a fifteen-year-old with extraordinary mathematical ability, as he investigates the murder of his neighbour’s dog. Simultaneously a detective story, a portrait of neurodiversity, and a moving father-son narrative. Winner of the Whitbread Book of the Year Award.

The Story of a Nutcracker

40.00 

The Story of a Nutcracker by Alexandre Dumas (Vintage) — his charming retelling of E.T.A. Hoffmann’s Christmas tale that inspired Tchaikovsky’s ballet. Written for his own children, Dumas brings characteristic warmth and narrative pace to Marie’s magical adventures. A delightful festive classic.

The Second Sex

55.00 

The Second Sex by Simone de Beauvoir (Vintage) — the foundational text of modern feminism, first published in 1949. ‘One is not born, but rather becomes, a woman’ — de Beauvoir’s central argument revealed femininity as social construction and permanently transformed thinking about gender. In Borde and Malovany-Chevallier’s landmark translation.

Covering Islam

50.00 

Covering Islam by Edward W. Said (Vintage) — the third volume of his landmark trilogy examines how Western media distort their coverage of the Islamic world. Drawing on the Iranian hostage crisis and other events, Said shows how ‘Islam’ functions as a threat-image in Western journalism. First published in 1981 — still urgently relevant.

The Ten Types of Human

55.00 

The Ten Types of Human by Dexter Dias (Vintage) — a human rights barrister uses evolutionary psychology and neuroscience to identify ten fundamental human responses to extreme situations. Moving between international courts and cutting-edge science, it asks what makes us capable of both cruelty and compassion. Remarkable science writing.

Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage

Bestseller

Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage

46.00 

Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage by Haruki Murakami (Vintage) — Tsukuru, still haunted by his friends’ inexplicable rejection sixteen years earlier, finally seeks the truth. Murakami’s most emotionally direct novel — about friendship, loss, and the wounds that shape a life. Translated by Philip Gabriel.

How Should a Person Be?

46.00 

How Should a Person Be? by Sheila Heti (Vintage) — one of the most original and provocative novels of the twenty-first century. Blurring fiction and autobiography, Sheila pursues the central question through friendship, love, and art with radical candour and considerable humour. A landmark of contemporary autofiction.

Look at the Birdie

46.00 

Look at the Birdie by Kurt Vonnegut (Vintage) — fourteen previously unpublished stories discovered after his death. These 1950s tales of postwar American life stand fully alongside his published work: warm, funny, and morally intelligent. A genuine posthumous discovery.

Independent People

50.00 

Independent People by Halldór Laxness (Vintage) — the Nobel Prize-winning Icelandic masterpiece. The story of the magnificently stubborn crofter Bjartur, who sacrifices everything for independence, is both absurd and devastating: one of world literature’s great portraits of human will. Translated by J.A. Thompson.

The Prince

35.00 

The Prince by Niccolò Machiavelli (Vintage) — the 1513 political masterpiece that inaugurated modern political science. Machiavelli’s stark account of how power is acquired and maintained, separated from conventional morality, remains one of the most famous and influential short texts in the history of ideas.

The Complete Novels

60.00 

The Complete Novels by Franz Kafka (Vintage) — The Trial, The Castle, and Amerika in one definitive volume. These three unfinished masterpieces define the Kafkaesque: arbitrary authority, impenetrable bureaucracy, and the individual’s helpless confrontation with the incomprehensible. Essential Kafka.

The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail

60.00 

The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail (Arrow) — the landmark 1982 speculative history proposing that Jesus survived the crucifixion and that his bloodline was protected through centuries by the Priory of Sion. The inspiration for The Da Vinci Code — one of the most controversial works of popular historical investigation ever written.

As I Lay Dying

46.00 

As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner (Vintage) — told through fifteen narrators as the Bundren family transports their dead matriarch for burial. A formally brilliant, darkly comic masterpiece of American modernism, written in six weeks with concentrated power. One of literature’s great experiments in narrative voice.

Absalom, Absalom!

46.00 

Absalom, Absalom! by William Faulkner (Vintage) — widely considered his greatest novel. Through multiple overlapping narrators reconstructing the story of the enigmatic Thomas Sutpen, Faulkner creates a devastating meditation on Southern history and the impossibility of knowing the past. A masterwork of world literature.

The Sound and the Fury

46.00 

The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner (Vintage) — a masterpiece of American modernism. The Compson family’s decline is told through four radically different perspectives, beginning with the fragmented consciousness of Benjy. Technically dazzling, emotionally devastating, and one of the most important American novels ever written.

The Elephant Vanishes

46.00 

The Elephant Vanishes by Haruki Murakami (Vintage) — seventeen short stories that established his international reputation. The mundane and the surreal coexist with quiet, unsettling force in tales of loneliness, strange encounters, and inexplicable loss. An essential introduction to Murakami’s singular voice.

South of the Border, West of the Sun

40.00 

South of the Border, West of the Sun by Haruki Murakami (Vintage) — a quietly devastating novel about the longing that haunts a life. When Hajime is reunited with his childhood love after twenty-five years, his apparently settled existence begins to unravel. Murakami’s most focused exploration of desire and the life unlived. Translated by Philip Gabriel.

Sputnik Sweetheart

46.00 

Sputnik Sweetheart by Haruki Murakami (Vintage) — a haunting short novel of unrequited love and mysterious disappearance. When Sumire vanishes on a Greek island, her friend K’s search opens onto the uncanny distances between even the closest people. Translated by Philip Gabriel.

Cutting for Stone

50.00 

Cutting for Stone by Abraham Verghese (Vintage) — a sweeping, luminous family saga set in an Ethiopian mission hospital. The story of twin brothers born of a vanished surgeon and a nun, unfolding against Ethiopia’s political upheavals. One of the most celebrated debut novels of the twenty-first century.

The Sound of Waves

46.00 

The Sound of Waves by Yukio Mishima (Vintage) — the most lyrical and accessible of his novels. A tender love story set on a small Japanese island, inspired by the ancient Greek romance Daphnis and Chloe, it is suffused with natural beauty and animated by Mishima’s characteristic luminosity. An ideal introduction to one of the twentieth century’s great writers.

The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea

46.00 

The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea by Yukio Mishima (Vintage) — a masterpiece of psychological intensity. When a merchant sailor’s love affair with a widow is seen as a betrayal of his heroic ideal by a nihilistic boys’ gang, the consequences are devastating. Mishima’s most accessible short novel.

Spring Snow

46.00 

Spring Snow by Yukio Mishima (Vintage) opens the masterful Sea of Fertility tetralogy. Set in Meiji Japan, it traces the forbidden love between the aristocratic Kiyoaki and the betrothed Satoko in prose of luminous beauty — a meditation on desire, loss, and the desire for transcendence.

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