Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker utgitt av Atlantic Books

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  • av K. A. S. (Author) Quinn
    144 - 165,-

    A magical, thrilling, time-travelling adventure trilogy for for 9-12 year old readers. 'Move over Harry Potter.' Evening Standard

  • - Political Writing from a Decade without a Name
    av Timothy Garton Ash
    419,-

    'Timothy Garton Ash is the best and most perceptive political writer of our time, and this book is a wonderful distillation of his thoughts on an extraordinary range of subjects. They were excellent as individual essays; put together like this, they shine the clearest of lights on an entire decade.' John Simpson

  • av Jacqueline Yallop
    146,-

    The darkly intimate story of intense rivalry between two sisters in one familiy in which the ties of love and hate, fear and jealousy, innocence and experience, have all become dangerously tangled. It is a must-read for anyone who loved Atonement.

  • - A Memoir Of My Mother And Her Island
    av Lorna Goodison
    165,-

    As read on Radio 4, an irresistibly joyful memoir of mothers and daughters, and the importance of home. 'The book is a joy... A bittersweet reminder to all Jamaica's exiles of what we have lost'. Independent

  • av Marcelo (author) Figueras
    288,-

    A novel that offers an adventure story about a young boy forced to square fantasy against reality.

  • av Clea Koff
    285,-

    A powerful, deeply personal account of a forensic anthropologist's work to uncover the horrors of genocide.

  • - The World Economic Crisis and What It Means
    av Vince (Author) Cable
    180,-

    The bestseller on the credit crunch. In this brilliant short book, Vince Cable, 'the sage of the credit crunch' (Daily Telegraph) explains how we got here and where we're going.

  • av Seb Hunter
    162,-

    'Downright hilarious' Herald

  • av The Clash
    195,-

    Strummer, Jones, Simonon & Headon. In their own words. For the first time. In paperback.

  • - The Heroic Life of the Atlantic Salmon
    av Richard Shelton
    245,-

    Combining natural history with beguiling autobiographical and historical narrative, To Sea and Back is a dazzling portrait of a fish whose story is closely intertwined with our own.

  • av Nick (Author) Lake
    252,-

    Taro - Japanese fisherman's son and silent assassin trained in the arts of death - is back in a second thrilling novel of ancient curses, epic battles, scheming warlords... and blood-sucking ninjas. 'A fierce, stylish, brooding, relentless beast of a book. The night has a new hero.' DARREN SHAN on Blood Ninja

  • - A Memoir
    av Vince Cable
    252,-

    The candid autobiography from Britain's most trusted politician, now available in paperback.

  • av Nick McDonell
    180,-

    The remarkable new novel from Nick McDonell, An Expensive Education cuts between the African bush and Harvard - taking its readers deep inside this iconic university and the inner workings of the American intelligence service. 'One of the most exciting new writers around.' Independent on Sunday

  • av Phil Rickman
    145,-

    The third instalment in the Merrily Watkins series: Single mother and Diocesan Exorcist Merrily Watkins must keep the peace in rural Hereford, quelling a modern witch hunt, and a killer with an old tradition to guard...

  • av Steven Galloway
    146,-

    'Crafted with unforgettable imagery and heartbreaking simplicity, Galloway's small novel speaks forcefully to the triumph of the spirit in the face of overwhelming despair.' Washington Post

  • - Memories of War in Germany and Japan
    av Ian Buruma
    195,-

    In Wages of Guilt, Ian Buruma explores the duplicity of feeling towards World War II amongst the people of two very different participant countries: Germany and Japan. 'A comparative study of great subtlety and intelligence' Spectator

  • - A Biography of the Roaring Twenties
    av Lucy Moore
    225,-

    Bracketed by the catastrophes of the Great War and the Wall Street Crash, 1920s America was a place of drama, tension and hedonism. This title presents a portrait of the era of invention and glamour.

  • - A Novel
    av Roberta Taylor
    162,-

    Roberta Taylor's memoir Too Many Mothers sold over 250,000 copies. Her gripping first novel, now available in paperback, is a tale of love and betrayal set in the freezing winter of London in 1963. 'A lovely book... [Roberta Taylor] is such a good writer... so original and different from other people, so outspoken and yet so warm.' Jilly Cooper

  • av Christopher Hope
    198,-

    A political satire and a winner at the 1985 Whitbread Prize for Fiction.

  • - A Personal History
    av Timothy Garton Ash
    195,-

    Timothy Garton Ash lived behind the Berlin Wall and joined the millions spied on by the Stasi. In 1993, he gained access to his Stasi file. Here he tells his story, in a classic memoir of dictatorship and betrayal. 'A chilling portrait of treachery and compromise... bravely and beautifully written' John le Carre

  • av Ian Buruma
    180,-

    When Sidney Vanoven is sent to occupied Japan, in the immediate aftermath of the Second World War, it is his dream posting. By day, he works in the censor's office watching Japanese films; at night he immerses himself in the sensual pleasures of Tokyo.

  • av Pascal Mercier
    165,-

    Pascal Mercier's haunting novel of the paths not taken, the choices not made, the lives not lived, Night Train to Lisbon has captured the hearts of readers across Europe, with over two million copies sold worldwide. 'A treat for the mind. One of the best books I have read in a long time.' Isabel Allende

  • - How Trade Shaped the World
    av William L. Bernstein
    295,-

    As globalisation wobbles into world crisis, a vividly written, brilliantly original history of world trade, the first for a generation: 'A Splendid Exchange is a splendid book.' New York TimesSHORTLISTED FOR THE FINANCIAL TIMES / GOLDMAN SACHS BUSINESS BOOK OF THE YEAR

  • - A Fantastical Journey around Your Head
    av Raymond Tallis
    285,-

    Explores the astonishing range of activities that go on inside our heads, most of which are entirely beyond our control. Describing about the head and brain, this book demonstrates that not only does consciousness not reside between our ears, but that our heads are infinitely cleverer than we are.

  • - The Fall of Anglo-Saxon England
    av Harriet Harvey Wood
    326,-

    The date of the battle of Hastings - 14 October 1066 - is probably the most famous in English history. This book brings to life the world of Harold the King and Duke William in a compelling narrative history that reads as vividly as reportage.

  • - A Journey Into Betrayal
    av Jan Wong
    342,-

    During the Cultural Revolution Jan Wong studied in Beijing and reported a fellow student to the authorities. Over thirty years later, she returned to China to find out what happened to the woman she betrayed. Chinese Whispers tells her remarkable story. 'Wong points the way for the future of travel writing.' Book of the Week, The Times

  • av Danny Moynihan
    146,-

    This blackest of comedies set in the international art scene finally comes to the big screen, with a star-studded cast, including Gillian Anderson, Jaime Winstone, Christopher Lee, Joanna Lumley and Heather Graham. 'Art is about life, the art world is about money. Boogie Woogie is where the two collide.' Damien Hirst

  • av Phil (Author) Rickman
    165,-

    The acclaimed second instalment of The John Dee Papers. Tudor intrigue, murder and the dark arts - brooding superstition leaves John Dee isolated in the land of his father...

  • - The Hunt for the World's Most Valuable Stamps
    av Helen Morgan
    225,-

    Follow the adventures of the world's most sought-after postage stamps - from a tropical Indian Ocean island to the hushed atmosphere of the modern auction room - in this dramatic and passionate tale of the first stamp hunters.

  • av Gregory Chaitin
    311,-

    Now in paperback: one of the world's greatest mathematicians explains his revolutionary hypothesis about the enigma at the heart of maths: omega (?). 'Chaitin comes across as a kind of mathematical Richard Feynman, intuitive and high-spirited, irreverent and plain-spoken.' Peter Pesic, TLS

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