Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker utgitt av Granta Books

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  • av Keith Ridgway
    145,-

    Two mid-ranking North London detectives, tasked with connecting a series of scattered and gruesome events, come to suspect the only certainty is that we've all misunderstood everything

  • av Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor
    165,-

  • - Intentions And Method
    av Edward W. Said
    225,-

    Edward Said's classic treatise on the role of the intellectual and the goal of criticism, which encompasses the great thinkers and writers of the last 200 years.

  • - And Other Literary And Cultural Essays
    av Edward W. Said
    225,-

    A compilation of 35 years' worth of critical essays from one of the boldest and most articulate cultural theorists of our time

  • - The Days and Nights of London Now - As Told by Those Who Love It, Hate It, Live It, Left It and Long for It
    av Craig Taylor
    175,-

    An extraordinary group portrait of London today: a book as rich, dynamic, lively, and diverse as the city itself.

  • av A.M. (Y) Homes
    145,-

    A funny, tender look at the ways your parents can disrupt your life and the pains of adolescence

  • av A.M. (Y) Homes
    134,-

    The Safety of Objects, A.M. Homes' first collection of short stories, displays the flair for the hilarious, the perverse and the extraordinary that characterizes all of her books.

  • av A. M. Homes
    155,-

    In this collection of stories, a woman pursues an unconventional strategy for getting pregnant; a former First Lady shows despair and courage in dealing with her husband's Alzheimer's; and adult tragedy intrudes into a childhood friendship.

  • - A Critical Journey
    av Janet Malcolm
    165,-

    In "Reading Chekhov" Janet Malcolm takes on three roles: literary critic, biographer and journalist. Her close readings of the stories and plays are interwoven with episodes from Chekhov's life and framed by an account of a recent journey she made to St Petersburg.

  • - Beasts
    av Ian Jack
    272,-

    This issue takes a wayward look at the lives of beasts. A dog prepares for the death of his master; a movie-going tarantula has a crush on Nicole Kidman; and a raven learns to speak Spanish. Photography of China's new young women and the streets of New York also features.

  • av Janice Galloway
    156,-

    One of our greatest contemporary authors writes about sex, school and adolescence in 1970s small-town Scotland.

  • av Sven Lindqvist
    195,-

    The long overdue first UK publication of one of Sven Lindqvist's best-loved books - and the one for which he is most famous in his home country - an exquisitely written meditation on the author's relationship with art.

  • - The Tangled Roots of Our Forests and Fairytales
    av Sara Maitland
    175,-

    A magical exploration of the ancient landscape of forests and the ancient genre of fairytales, drawing fascinating and surprising connections between the two, by the author of the bestselling A Book Of Silence

  • - A Journey to the Frozen Heart of Siberia
    av Jacek Hugo-Bader
    165,-

    A classic in the making and an unparalleled insight into life in Siberia and its various communities and tribes.

  • av Ben Marcus
    165,-

    Ben Marcus's highly anticipated new short story collection - his first since his extraordinary debut The Age of Wire and String

  • - A Memoir
    av Mark Gevisser
    165,-

    This is a story of dispossession, a meditation on place, home and identity, as well as a deeply personal account of the social ills of South Africa and the triumph of its people

  • - Life Under Fire on a Sarajevo Street
    av Barbara (Y) Demick
    165,-

    Twenty years after the siege of Sarajevo, BBC Samuel Johnson Prize winner Barbara Demick revisits her compelling account of living in a city under fire.

  • av Jo Baker
    155,-

    An epic, involving and exquisitely told story of inheritance and chance as it plays out in one family, across one century and four generations.

  • av Nikolai Vasilievich Gogol
    175,-

    Collected here are superb new translations of the finest tales - from the founding master of Russian surreal allegory and irony

  • av Patrick deWitt
    165,-

    Shortlisted for the 2011 Man Booker Prize, deWitt's dazzlingly original second novel is a darkly funny, offbeat western about a reluctant assassin and his murderous brother.

  • av Julian Baggini
    165,-

    'In this entertaining, educative and gracefully written book, Julian Baggini explores the questions of the nature of the self and in what sense it persists through time ... This is one of the best, most readable and most stimulating introductions yet written about this intriguing topic' - AC Grayling

  • av Catherine Hall
    145,-

    A dazzling second novel from the author whose debut was compared to Sarah Waters and Daphne Du Maurier and won her tens of thousands of readers ...

  • av Jessica Francis Kane
    135,-

    An evocative and moving debut novel - based on the true story of the worst UK civilian disaster of the Second World War, when 173 people were crushed to death at Bethnal Green tube station during the Blitz.

  • - Brief Encounters
    av Ian Jack
    272,-

    How do you cope with the great, if you yourself are not so great? Do you speak, do you listen, in the face of every difficulty do you try to please? The sensible thing to do is keep a diary. Irish poet Richard Murphy remembers his experiences with Auden, J.R. Ackerley and Theodore Roethke.

  • - Lifes Like That
    av Granta
    352,-

    An anthology of private memory, including Lynn Barber on her close encounter with bigamy, Zoe Heller on her father's lovers, and Simon Gray on absent friends. Plus new fiction from J. Robert Lennon and Nell Freudenberger.

  • - Overreachers
    av Ian Jack
    352,-

    There was always the - is this it? - issue. It made him think of his father again. His father had been a New Yorker and had New Yorker ways. His father always felt there should be more, more for Henry and his brothers. More than they had. To accept, to not overreach, was to accept defeat.

  • - Necessary Journeys
    av Ian Jack
    180,-

    Some travel is vital to the traveller. Sometimes you need to get home or get away. Sometimes this is far from easy. This issue of Granta contains compelling stories about journeys which need to be made. You might call it necessary travel writing.

  • - Women And Children First
    av Ian Jack
    352,-

    This issue reflects a variety of the extreme individual experience provided by the 20th century. James Hamilton-Paterson recounts his rape by five men in Libya; Marlon Brando reveals the stupidities of celebrity to Studs Terkel; and Andrew Brown describes the death of God in the Church of England.

  • - The Assassin
    av Ian Jack
    352,-

    In 1966, the South African premier, Hendrik Verwoerd was stabbed to death in the South African parliament. Who was the killer and what was his motives? A political enemy of the system? A madman?

  • - Shrinks
    av Ian Jack
    352,-

    This issue examines the experience from the patient's couch and the psychiatrist's chair, in both fiction and non-fiction. The contributors include Elliot Perlman, Patrick McGrath, Edmund White and Ved Mehta.

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