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Happening

40.00 

Annie Ernaux’s spare, unflinching account of her illegal abortion in France in 1963 — written with autobiographical directness and extraordinary moral courage. A testimony that refuses sentimentality and demands confrontation with the reality of living without bodily autonomy, from the 2022 Nobel laureate.

The Nakano Thrift Shop

46.00 

Hiromi Kawakami’s warm, funny novel set in a Tokyo thrift shop — owner, sister, and assistant navigating work, love, and the peculiar intimacy of sorting through other people’s discarded things. As subtle and precise as her best work, finding emotional complexity in the perfectly observed everyday.

The Ten Loves of Mr Nishino

46.00 

Ten women, ten stories, one unknowable man — Hiromi Kawakami’s formally inventive novel traces Mr Nishino’s life through the perspectives of those who loved him. A cumulative portrait built from memory and angle: a meditation on love and the gap between experience and truth.

Strange Weather in Tokyo

46.00 

Hiromi Kawakami’s celebrated novel about an unexpected friendship between a woman and her former teacher that gradually becomes something more. Quiet, tender, and deeply affecting — a love story told through sake, food, and walks in parks, with prose of extraordinary sensory attention.

Under the Eye of the Big Bird

46.00 

Hiromi Kawakami’s lyrical linked stories about new beings on Earth after humanity’s end — carrying fragments of human memory and desire without understanding them. Closer to prose poetry than science fiction, and shortlisted for the International Booker Prize: quietly extraordinary.

The Vegetarian A Novel

46.00 

Han Kang’s International Booker Prize winner — a woman stops eating meat and the violent, obsessive responses of those around her. Elliptical and deeply unsettling, The Vegetarian uses its premise to explore bodily autonomy, compliance, and what happens to women who simply refuse.

The Beatles Anthology (25th Anniversary Reissue)

200.00 

The definitive history of the greatest band in popular music, told in their own words and images — assembled from the personal archives of John, Paul, George, and Ringo. Extraordinary photography and intimate testimony make this 25th anniversary reissue essential for every Beatles fan.

Get Your Sh*t Together

90.00 

David Shrigley’s irreverent anti-self-help book — crude drawings and blunt text from the beloved British artist who meets life’s chaos with a shrug and a deadpan one-liner. Perfect for anyone who finds conventional self-help insufferable: a book that helps by not trying to.

Coffee Cards: 50 Recipes for a Better Brew

90.00 

50 beautifully illustrated recipe cards for better coffee — from perfect espresso to inventive iced drinks, coffee cocktails, and baking projects. Vivian Nguyen’s practical, enthusiastic guide covers every brewing method and makes a perfect gift for anyone serious about their morning ritual.

The Lost Daughter

Bestseller

The Lost Daughter

46.00 

Elena Ferrante’s taut, unsettling portrait of a woman on holiday who becomes obsessed with a young mother on the beach — and with her own buried ambivalence as a mother. A meditation on maternal love, resentment, and guilt treated with characteristic directness and complete truth.

The Lying Life of Adults

46.00 

Elena Ferrante’s standalone novel after the Neapolitan tetralogy — a teenager’s obsessive search for her father’s disreputable sister, and the painful process of seeing parents clearly for the first time. Ferociously precise on adolescent disillusionment and the discovery of adult lies.

The Story of the Lost Child

50.00 

The fourth and final Neapolitan novel — sixty years of friendship, competition, love, and mystery brought to devastating conclusion. The full meaning of Elena and Lila’s extraordinary relationship comes into final focus in pages that are among the most powerful in contemporary fiction.

Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay

50.00 

The third Neapolitan novel — Elena and Lila through 1970s Italy’s political tumult, the labour movement, and the complexities of feminism. Ferrante’s most explicitly political volume traces two women navigating class, identity, and the tension between personal life and collective action.

The Story of a New Name

46.00 

The second Neapolitan novel — Lila married and constrained, Elena escaped to university and finding liberation complicated by loss. Ferrante traces their diverging paths with ferocity and psychological depth: richer, darker, and more complete than its predecessor, and equally essential.

My Brilliant Friend

50.00 

The first volume of Ferrante’s celebrated Neapolitan novels — the friendship of Elena and Lila from childhood in 1950s Naples. Intense, competitive, and one of literature’s greatest portraits of female friendship: the starting point for one of the great reading experiences in contemporary fiction.

The Days of Abandonment

46.00 

Elena Ferrante’s incandescent, terrifying portrait of a woman whose life dissolves when her husband leaves. Compact, relentless, and ferociously psychologically precise: the novel that first showed international readers the full force of Ferrante’s gifts, and one of the defining feminist novels of the century.

Lust for Life

46.00 

Irving Stone’s celebrated biographical novel of Vincent van Gogh — an immersive, passionately researched account of the painter’s obsessive genius, poverty, and tragic life. The definitive fictional portrait of van Gogh, which has introduced generations of readers to one of art history’s most transcendent careers.

Tina Turner – My Love Story

45.00 

Tina Turner’s official autobiography — the story of a life that moved from trauma and abuse to global superstardom and a late-life transformation. Intimate, candid, and told without self-pity: one of popular music’s greatest performers on survival, resilience, and beginning again.

Super-Frog Saves Tokyo

55.00 

A giant frog arrives at a Tokyo bank employee’s apartment with a mission: together they must prevent an earthquake from destroying the city. Murakami’s celebrated story about heroism, invisibility, and saving the world without recognition — beautifully illustrated and a perfect introduction to his magical realism.

The Pole & Other Stories

50.00 

J.M. Coetzee’s late story collection — including the title novella about an elderly Polish musician’s love for a younger Spanish woman, and accompanying stories meditating on desire, age, and human connection. Precise, morally serious, and characteristic of a Nobel laureate’s late mastery.

Surrounded by Idiots The Four Types of Human Behaviour (or, How to Understand Those Who Cannot Be Understood)

50.00 

The international phenomenon selling millions worldwide — Thomas Erikson’s accessible framework for understanding four fundamental behaviour types. Using red, yellow, green, and blue personalities, a practical guide to why people behave as they do, and how understanding them transforms every relationship.

The Myth of Normal Illness, Health & Healing in a Toxic Culture

60.00 

Gabor and Daniel Maté’s sweeping examination of how modern culture systematically produces illness — and why healing requires addressing the social and emotional environments that generate it. Ambitious, compassionate, and essential: a fundamental challenge to what we call ‘normal’ in contemporary life.

When the Body Says No The Cost of Hidden Stress

60.00 

Gabor Maté’s landmark exploration of how suppressed emotion and chronic stress manifest in the body as disease — from cancer to autoimmune conditions. Through case studies and research, a compassionate challenge to the mind-body split, and essential reading for anyone interested in emotional and physical health.

Hold on to Your Kids Why Parents Need to Matter More Than Peers

60.00 

Gordon Neufeld and Gabor Maté’s groundbreaking argument that peer orientation — not parents stepping aside — undermines healthy child development. Drawing on clinical experience and research, a practical guide to restoring the parent-child connection that protects children and allows them to mature.

The Martian

55.00 

Mark Watney, left behind on Mars, must use real science to survive long enough to be rescued. Andy Weir’s compulsively readable novel makes the physics, chemistry, and botany genuinely accurate — a survival story that is simultaneously a thriller, a comedy, and a love letter to problem-solving.

America Day by Day

50.00 

Simone de Beauvoir’s sharp, intelligent account of a four-month journey across America in 1947 — from New York jazz clubs to segregated Southern states. The existentialist philosopher’s analytical rigour and political engagement make this an essential portrait of America at the midpoint of its century.

Slaughterhouse 5 Vintage War

46.00 

Kurt Vonnegut’s darkly comedic anti-war masterpiece — Billy Pilgrim, unstuck in time, moving between Dresden’s firebombing and suburban American life. ‘So it goes.’ One of the most important novels ever written about war, time, and the mechanics of surviving an insane world.

Don Quixote

55.00 

The first modern novel and one of literature’s greatest achievements — Cervantes’s knight errant tilting at windmills in a parody that becomes a profound meditation on fiction, reality, and idealism. Four hundred years old and never less than contemporary: an essential work for every serious reader.

Grimus

50.00 

Salman Rushdie’s first novel — a wildly ambitious 1975 fantasy about an immortal Native American’s journey to an island outside time, drawing on Sufi philosophy and science fiction. Less polished than his mature work but essential for understanding the development of one of literature’s great imaginations.

Light in August

46.00 

William Faulkner’s formally ambitious masterpiece — three narrative strands exploring race, religion, and the crushing weight of the Southern past. Joe Christmas, Lena Grove, and Reverend Hightower: characters whose stories interweave into one of the great American novels of the twentieth century.

Eileen

46.00 

Ottessa Moshfegh’s Booker-shortlisted debut — Eileen Dunlop, consumed by misanthropy and dark fantasies in 1960s Massachusetts, until a glamorous colleague changes everything. Cool, precise, and wickedly funny: the novel that announced a major and discomforting new voice in American fiction.

Fiesta The Sun Also Rises

46.00 

Hemingway’s 1926 masterpiece — Jake Barnes, Brett Ashley, and the Lost Generation adrift in Paris and Pamplona, living brilliantly and feeling nothing. Revolutionary prose style and one of modern fiction’s most vivid accounts of post-war disillusionment. The essential Hemingway text.

Bodily Harm

50.00 

Margaret Atwood’s taut, psychologically complex novel — a Canadian journalist’s Caribbean escape becomes entanglement in a coup and genuine danger. A thriller that explores voyeurism, bodily autonomy, and political complacency, and one of Atwood’s most formally accomplished early works.

Life Before Man

46.00 

Margaret Atwood’s underrated 1979 novel — three people in Toronto navigating a suicide’s aftermath, failing marriages, and emotional paralysis. Precise, unsentimental, and rich in Atwood’s characteristic irony, this portrait of small cruelties and accumulated distances is one of her most accomplished works.

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