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Nights of Plague

50.00 

Nights of Plague by Orhan Pamuk (Faber) — the Ottoman island of Mingheria, 1901: a deadly plague spreading through a population whose Muslim and Greek communities are held in delicate balance, and a governor and his princess wife at the centre of a crisis that is simultaneously medical, political, and historical. Pamuk’s pandemic novel — begun before COVID-19, completed during it — at his most historically ambitious. Published by Faber & Faber.

Come Rain or Come Shine

28.00 

Come Rain or Come Shine by Kazuo Ishiguro (Faber) — in the space of a single evening, a journey, a meal, a game of cards, everything is decided or not decided between a man and a woman who have known each other for fifteen years. Ishiguro’s short story as compressed and precisely balanced as a Japanese object — few pages that repay repeated reading. Part of the Faber Stories series. Published by Faber & Faber.

Normal People

46.00 

Normal People by Sally Rooney (Faber) — Connell and Marianne in school, then in Trinity College Dublin, then in the world: a love story of complete precision and complete emotional honesty, in which two intelligent people repeatedly fail and find each other. The novel that established Rooney as the defining literary voice of her generation in English — intimate, funny, and quietly devastating. Published by Faber & Faber.

Hitchcock/Truffaut

100.00 

Hitchcock/Truffaut by François Truffaut (Faber) — fifty hours of conversation between Truffaut and Hitchcock about every film Hitchcock had made, every technique he had developed, every idea about the relationship between director and audience. The most important text in the history of film theory — the work in which cinema was most fully articulated by its most articulate practitioner. Essential reading for every filmmaker and cinephile. Published by Faber & Faber.

Conversations with Friends

46.00 

Conversations with Friends by Sally Rooney (Faber) — Frances, twenty-one, a spoken-word poet in Dublin, falls in love with Nick, a married man ten years older, and the affair dismantles the emotional self-sufficiency she was absolutely sure she possessed. Rooney’s debut established her as the defining voice of a generation — a writer who takes seriously the specific emotional and political reality of being young and intelligent and precarious in contemporary Europe. Published by Faber & Faber.

The Festival of Insignificance

46.00 

The Festival of Insignificance by Milan Kundera (Faber) — four old friends meet in a Paris park, and in their conversation Kundera finds the vehicle for a final meditation on the questions that have occupied him for six decades: the nature of art, the comedy of existence, the possibility that what we think matters does not, and that this might be not a tragedy but a liberation. Barely a hundred and twenty pages — the perfect capstone to one of the great bodies of work in twentieth-century literature. Published by Faber & Faber.

The Buried Giant

46.00 

The Buried Giant by Kazuo Ishiguro (Faber) — in a post-Arthurian Britain veiled in mist and forgetting, an elderly couple journey to find their son, gradually discovering the nature and purpose of a collective amnesia that has settled over the entire country. What do we owe to a painful past we might prefer to forget? Ishiguro’s most mythological novel — profound, strange, and unforgettable from a Nobel laureate at the height of his powers. Published by Faber & Faber.

Solaris

46.00 

Solaris by Stanislaw Lem (Faber) — a spacecraft orbits a planet whose ocean may or may not be alive, may or may not be intelligent, and materialises from the scientists’ subconscious the people they have lost. The most profound science fiction novel ever written about the impossibility of genuine contact with a genuinely alien intelligence — and about the impossibility of escaping the contents of one’s own mind. Tarkovsky made it into one of the great films; the novel is better. Published by Faber & Faber.

The Discreet Hero

Bestseller

The Discreet Hero

45.00 

The Discreet Hero by Mario Vargas Llosa (Faber) — two Peruvian men face simple choices: one refuses to sell his house to a developer, one refuses to pay extortion money. In the simplicity of these choices, Vargas Llosa finds the substance of a meditation on what honour costs and what it is worth. Among his most warmly human novels — lighter in tone than his major works but no less precise. The ideal entry point for readers new to Vargas Llosa. Published by Faber & Faber.

The War of the End of the World

55.00 

The War of the End of the World by Mario Vargas Llosa (Faber) — a holy man and his thousands of followers in the Brazilian backcountry face four military expeditions from the newly formed Republic in one of the most extraordinary episodes in South American history. Vargas Llosa’s most ambitious novel — vast in scope, intricate in structure, overwhelming in historical and human detail. One of the defining Latin American novels and a genuine masterpiece of world literature. Published by Faber & Faber.

The Feast of the Goat

46.00 

The Feast of the Goat by Mario Vargas Llosa (Faber) — 1961, the Dominican Republic: five men wait in a car to assassinate the dictator Trujillo, who has governed with a terror so complete it has become the atmosphere of daily life. Vargas Llosa’s most formally accomplished novel — about the nature of absolute power, what it does to those who exercise it and those who submit to it. One of the great political novels of the twenty-first century. Published by Faber & Faber.

The Unconsoled

50.00 

The Unconsoled by Kazuo Ishiguro (Faber) — a celebrated pianist arrives in a Central European city to give a concert of enormous civic importance, and finds himself drawn into an endless succession of encounters and detours whose aggregate logic is the logic of a dream. Deliberately structured as an extended dream, demanding complete surrender — a novel about the impossibility of presence and the gap between our obligations and our capacity to fulfil them. Extraordinary. Published by Faber & Faber.

When We Were Orphans

46.00 

When We Were Orphans by Kazuo Ishiguro (Faber) — the most celebrated detective in 1930s London has never stopped believing his parents, who disappeared in Shanghai when he was a child, can be found. When he returns to Shanghai as the world darkens toward war, he discovers not truth but the lengths to which a person can go to maintain a necessary illusion. A thriller without the certainties of the thriller genre — growing stranger and more moving with every page. Published by Faber & Faber.

My Name Is Red

46.00 

My Name Is Red by Orhan Pamuk (Faber) — Constantinople, 1591: a master miniaturist is murdered, and the detective who must identify the killer is also in love with the murdered man’s niece. A murder mystery, a love story, and a meditation on art, style, and the threat that Western perspective posed to the Islamic painting tradition — narrated by a corpse, a dog, a tree, and the colour red itself. Winner of the Nobel Prize. Published by Faber & Faber.

The Remains of the Day

46.00 

The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro (Faber) — Stevens, a perfect butler, takes a rare motoring holiday and is finally alone with the question he has spent his life not asking: whether the life he gave to perfect service was a life worth giving. Booker Prize winner 1989 — a masterpiece of first-person narration in which every sentence means more than it says, and Stevens’s careful prose becomes the vehicle for a tragedy of unacknowledged feeling and unrecoverable time. Published by Faber & Faber.

Nocturnes

46.00 

Nocturnes by Kazuo Ishiguro (Faber) — five stories linked by music: a Venice gondolier, a London jazz guitarist, a cellist in Rome, a failed musician in an English pub, and a saxophonist in a luxury hotel. Each story requires its compression and nothing more; together they constitute something as sustained and as resonant as a novel — about the gap between what we imagined our lives would be and what they have actually become. Essential Ishiguro. Published by Faber & Faber.

The Museum of Innocence

50.00 

The Museum of Innocence by Orhan Pamuk (Faber) — Kemal Basmaci falls in love in 1975 Istanbul, and when Füsun disappears into another world, he spends years collecting every object that carries the trace of their time together and builds a museum. Simultaneously a love story, a portrait of Istanbul across three decades, and a genuinely novel form — a novel whose narrator builds, in the text and in reality, a museum in Istanbul that readers can visit. Published by Faber & Faber.

The Bad Girl

50.00 

The Bad Girl by Mario Vargas Llosa (Faber) — Otilia Salaverry meets Ricardo Somocurcio in Lima in 1950 and proceeds to disappear from and reappear in his life over five decades, always more dangerous, always more desired. A tribute to Flaubert’s Sentimental Education — a novel about the man who loves rather than the woman who is loved, about romantic obsession and self-destruction, vivid with Lima, Paris, London, Tokyo, and Madrid across a century. Published by Faber & Faber.

Loving Sabotage

46.00 

Loving Sabotage by Amélie Nothomb (Faber) — Nothomb’s childhood at an elite Chinese school for diplomatic children in 1970s Beijing, where the children of foreign embassies formed their own closed world with its own cruelties. Simultaneously a comedy of manners and a disturbing account of how social worlds form and enforce themselves, written with characteristic self-deprecating humour and psychological precision. Ideal for readers who loved Fear and Trembling. Published by Faber & Faber.

Woody Allen on Woody Allen

60.00 

Woody Allen on Woody Allen by Stig Björkman (Faber) — Allen in extended conversation: about the films he is proudest of and the ones he thinks failed, about Bergman and Fellini and the Marx Brothers, about what it is like to write, direct, and perform simultaneously for five decades. The definitive portrait of one of the most prolific and most significant filmmakers in American cinema — candid, reflective, and essential. Published by Faber & Faber.

Fear and Trembling

46.00 

Fear and Trembling by Amélie Nothomb (Faber) — a young Belgian woman arrives in Tokyo to begin her career at a large corporation and descends, through a series of small errors and corrections, to the bottom of the organisational hierarchy. Winner of the Grand Prix du roman de l’Académie française — a wickedly sharp novel about the collision between Western individualism and Japanese corporate culture, told with deadpan precision and dark comedy. Perfect in its brevity. Published by Faber & Faber.

Lynch on Lynch

80.00 

Lynch on Lynch by Chris Rodley (Faber) — David Lynch talks about his childhood, his images, his process, and the specific texture of each of his films: from Eraserhead through Blue Velvet, Wild at Heart, Twin Peaks, Lost Highway, and Mulholland Drive. The most comprehensive and most revealing portrait of one of the most important and most unclassifiable filmmakers alive. Essential for any Lynch devotee. Published by Faber & Faber.

Laughable Loves

46.00 

Laughable Loves by Milan Kundera (Faber) — seven stories set in 1960s Czechoslovakia, in which men and women navigate the gap between public performance and private reality with a mixture of weariness, ingenuity, and erotic energy. The early short fiction in which Kundera’s characteristic voice first becomes fully itself: philosophical intelligence, erotic comedy, and Central European melancholy in perfect balance. The ideal introduction to his work. Published by Faber & Faber.

Life Is Elsewhere

46.00 

Life Is Elsewhere by Milan Kundera (Faber) — Jaromil, a poet in Communist Czechoslovakia, is the product of a mother so completely invested in his genius that she has made him incapable of any relationship not mediated by her approval. One of Kundera’s most psychologically acute novels — a portrait of artistic narcissism whose implications extend far beyond its historical setting. Underrated even among Kundera devotees. Essential reading. Published by Faber & Faber.

The Book of Laughter and Forgetting

46.00 

The Book of Laughter and Forgetting by Milan Kundera (Faber) — seven stories that are also one story, linked by the themes of memory and forgetting, political power, and the laughter that both subverts and accompanies it. Written after Kundera was stripped of his Czech citizenship and forced into exile — simultaneously a private grief and a political act, an insistence that the things totalitarianism destroys (memory, complexity, the individual voice) matter. Published by Faber & Faber.

The Time of the Hero

46.00 

The Time of the Hero by Mario Vargas Llosa (Faber) — young cadets at a Lima military academy navigate the rituals of institutional brutality presented as education, until the death of a cadet reveals how completely the institution will protect itself against any truth that threatens its dignity. Written at twenty-six from personal experience — the Peruvian military burned copies publicly. A landmark of Latin American literature. Published by Faber & Faber.

Conversations in the Cathedral

50.00 

Conversations in the Cathedral by Mario Vargas Llosa (Faber) — two men in a Lima bar ask when Peru screwed itself up, and the novel’s extraordinary formal structure — intertwining time frames and voices — reconstructs the answer across five hundred pages. Considered by many critics Vargas Llosa’s greatest achievement: the structure itself enacts the argument, that corruption is not dramatic but gradual, not an event but an environment. Published by Faber & Faber.

The Joke

46.00 

The Joke by Milan Kundera (Faber) — a sardonic postcard written in 1948 ends Ludvík’s university career and his future; fifteen years later, his revenge arrives too late to mean what he intended. Kundera’s first novel, suppressed after the Soviet invasion, in which his characteristic themes first find full expression: the relationship between the personal and the political, between love and power, between memory and the self that remembers. Published by Faber & Faber.

Who Killed Palomino Molero?

46.00 

Who Killed Palomino Molero? by Mario Vargas Llosa (Faber) — a young air force pilot, beloved and gentle, is found tortured and murdered in a small Peruvian coastal town. Lieutenant Lituma investigates in the heat and the dust, and what he finds is a story of desire, hierarchy, and the cruelties that class and power arrange in any society that refuses to examine them honestly. Vargas Llosa at his most economical — devastating in barely a hundred and sixty pages. Published by Faber & Faber.

Immortality

46.00 

Immortality by Milan Kundera (Faber) — Kundera’s most ambitious novel: a meditation on fame, identity, and what it means to be a person in a world saturated with images of people that outlast, distort, and ultimately replace the originals. Formally extraordinary — Kundera appears as a character, converses with his creations, and moves between Paris and nineteenth-century Germany with complete confidence. The summit of his novelistic achievement. Published by Faber & Faber.

Selected Poems

55.00 

Selected Poems by Sylvia Plath (Faber) — the essential Plath collection, presenting the poems she was preparing for publication at the time of her death alongside essential earlier work. ‘Lady Lazarus’, ‘Daddy’, ‘Ariel’, ‘Mad Girl’s Love Song’, ‘Morning Song’ — poems of extraordinary intensity and technical command that are as much performances as revelations, as much art as autobiography. The definitive Plath selection. Published by Faber & Faber.

The Unbearable Lightness of Being

46.00 

The Unbearable Lightness of Being by Milan Kundera (Faber) — Tomas and Tereza in the shadow of the Prague Spring: a love story that becomes a sustained philosophical inquiry into whether life, happening only once and therefore never rehearsed or corrected, is unbearably light or unbearably heavy. Kundera’s narrating voice — ironic, erudite, playfully direct — was something genuinely new in world fiction. The essential starting point for his extraordinary body of work. Published by Faber & Faber.

In a Place of Darkness

46.00 

In a Place of Darkness by Stuart MacBride (Corgi) — the latest Logan McRae thriller, set in the wind-scoured landscape of Aberdeen where a body found in circumstances suggesting a serial killer leads McRae toward something he was not prepared to find. MacBride combines the atmospheric intensity of Nordic noir with the black comedy and psychological depth that have made his series one of the most consistently acclaimed in British crime fiction. Published by Corgi.

Good Omens

46.00 

Good Omens by Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman (Corgi) — the angel Aziraphale and the demon Crowley, grown fond of Earth after millennia of residence, would prefer the Apocalypse not to happen. Pratchett and Gaiman’s collaborative novel is one of the funniest, most inventive, and most warmly humane books ever written about the end of everything — taking theology seriously and joking about it simultaneously. Essential for fans of either author. Published by Corgi.

Origin

46.00 

Origin by Dan Brown (Corgi) — a futurist genius is about to announce a discovery that will answer where we come from and where we are going. Before he can speak, he is assassinated. Robert Langdon races through Gaudí’s Sagrada Família and the Guggenheim Bilbao to find what the genius discovered and who killed him. Brown’s most philosophically ambitious Langdon novel — a thriller about science, religion, and the nature of human destiny. Published by Corgi.

Inferno

46.00 

Inferno by Dan Brown (Corgi) — Robert Langdon wakes in Florence with a gunshot wound and no memory of the previous forty-eight hours. A code encoded in Botticelli’s Map of Hell leads him through the most beautiful buildings of Florence, Venice, and Istanbul in a race to prevent a catastrophe of Dante-esque proportions. The fourth Langdon novel combines Renaissance art history and Dante scholarship with Brown’s trademark plotting velocity. Published by Corgi.

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