Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker utgitt av Seagull Books London Ltd

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  • - The Physiognomy of Mysticism
    av Laszlo F. Foldenyi
    285,-

    Collection of essays that examine the rich history of European culture through the lens of mythology and philosophy.

  • - Tender as Memory
    av Guillaume Apollinaire
    264,-

    Collects the remarkable letters and poems sent by French poet Guillaume Apollinaire to his fiancee, Madeleine Pages, during World War I.

  • - (The Notebooks)
    av Tomas Espedal
    175,-

    A story of a boy growing up to be a writer. It discusses the profession of writing - the routines, responsibility, and obstacles. It also discusses being a father, a son, and a grandson; a family and a family's tales; and, how preceding generations mark their successors.

  • av Dorothee Elmiger
    175,-

    A fire broke out in the coal seams of their town years ago, and the flames are still smoldering underground. Margaret and Fritzi are the two sisters who are the last remaining youth of this vanishing town. Their inheritance is nothing but an abandoned swathe of land ruled by devastation.

  • av Hamid Dabashi
    172,-

    Born in Tehran in 1957, film-maker Mohsen Ostad Ali Makhmalbaf grew up in the religiously and politically charged atmosphere of the 1960s. In this title, he reflects on the relationship between cinema and violence, tolerance, and social change, as well as the political and artistic importance of the autonomy of the film-maker.

  • - Photographs of America by Pedro Meyer, Text by Jean-Paul Sartre
    av Jean-Paul Sartre
    363,-

    "Everyone is free here. . . . The cities are open. They are open to the world and to the future. That is what gives them all an air of adventure; and . . . a kind of touching beauty." So wrote the French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre on a 1945 trip to the United States during which he crossed the country and dove deep into the soul of the American city. In this new volume, Sartre's reflections on the distinctly American quality of cities in the United States are accompanied by Pedro Meyer's photographs of American cities, offering similarly sharp insights, but through a different historical lens: that of the late eighties and early nineties. Together, the photographs and essays articulate the enduring essence of American urban existence--its relationship with time, with labor and humanity, and with the open spaces emblematic of America.

  • - A Winter's Tale
    av Thomas Bernhard
    363,-

    One night in the middle of winter, as deep snow covers the mountains and forests of Austria, a doctor is crossing a ridge from Traich to Foding to see a patient. He stumbles over a body in the darkness and fears it is a corpse. But it's not a corpse at all - in fact, it's wooden-legged Victor Halfwit, collapsed, but still very much alive.

  • - A Conversation with Imre Kertesz
    av Imre Kertész
    125,-

    Reflecting on Imre Kertesz's experiences of the Holocaust and the Soviet occupation of Hungary, this title likens the ideological machinery of National Socialism to the oppressive routines of life under communism.

  • av Luigi Pintor
    199,-

    From the idyll of his Sardinian childhood to the transformative experience of the anti-Fascist resistance, and from postwar militancy to the dismal regression of Italian culture, the author captures memories that are intensely personal and inseparable from political and intellectual experience.

  • av Thomas Bernhard
    197,-

    The Austrian playwright, novelist, and poet Thomas Bernhard (1931-89) is acknowledged as one of the major writers of our time. This collection includes seven stories that capture Bernhard's distinct darkly comic voice and vision - often compared to Kafka and Musil - commenting on a corrupted world.

  • av Ruth Lillegraven
    199,-

    Norway. The 1800s. Endre must to take over the family farm from his father--his father, who swings the sickle and sharpens the scythe, and says this is the only way in which rocks and stones and mounts and waves can still be ours. But Endre is strange, he keeps to himself, unlike his brothers who are merry and full of joy. He wants to live in the farm without longing to leave, but he is struggling. Then he meets Abelone--"the bearer of light." Tall and thin, always sitting with her books, sharper than all she went to school with, she is about to be a teacher. They appear to come from different worlds--one from the ancient, traditional, natural world; the other from the forward-looking world of modernity, of breaking away, and of renewal. But there is love--great and immediate. With new ideas and new languages, Abelone opens up the world of Endre--whose name means "change." A novel written in lyrical verse, Ruth Lillegraven's Sickle is an unforgettable evocation of longing and loss, of dreams and reality, and the importance of language itself.

  • av Maurizio Torchio
    277,-

    A powerful examination of the torture that is solitary confinement.

  • av Dorothee Elmiger & Megan Ewing
    245 - 276,-

  • - and Other Poems
    av Stella Vinitchi Radulescu
    199,-

    Stella Vinitchi Radulescu's poetry dwells in spaces of paradox, seeking out the words, metaphors, and images that capture both the peaceful stillness of snow and the desperate cry of human experience. A Cry in the Snow often draws on these two fertile tropes: the beauty of nature and the power and limitations of language. A trilingual poet who has published in French, English, and her native Romanian, Radulescu seeks to harness the elemental aspects of human experience, working between language and the mysterious power of silence. Combining poems from two French-language collections, Un Cri dans la neige (A Cry in the Snow) and a poetic prose sequence, Journal aux yeux fermés (Journal with Closed Eyes), this collection presents the distinctive and powerful French poems of Stella Vinitchi Radulescu to an English-language readership for the first time.

  • - And Other Stories
    av Easterine Kire
    275,-

    Stories based on folktales from Northeast India in which magic and reality coexist beautifully.

  • av Krisztina Toth
    248,-

    Like stars in the sky, pixels may seem like tiny, individual points. But, when viewed from a distance, they can create elaborate images. Each pixel contributes to this array, but no individual point can create the whole. The thirty stories that comprise Krisztina Tóth's book similarly produce an interconnected web. While each tale of love, loss, and failed self-determination narrates the sensuousness of an individual's life, together, the thirty stories tell a more complicated tale of relationships. Circumstances that appear unrelated may converge in harmony or in heartbreak, just as the events that loom largest may fail to produce a longed-for outcome. These threads often determine the course of lives in unpredictable ways--sometimes comic, sometimes tragic, but rarely in the ways we originally anticipated.

  • av Jo Lendle
    220 - 258,-

  • - 166 Love Stories
    av Alexander Kluge
    388,-

    A major collection that brings together 166 stories by the German master that deal with love.

  • av Anselm Kiefer, Klaus Dermutz & Tess Lewis
    202 - 363,-

  • - The Life and Death of Buenaventura Durruti
    av Hans Magnus Enzensberger
    295,-

    An account of the life and death of Buenaventura Durruti, a Spanish Civil War leader, that turns his life into a larger story of revolution, commitment, and failed struggles for freedom.

  • - The Horizon of Early Baroque and Other Essays
    av Yves Bonnefoy
    415,-

    A richly illustrated account by the late French poet of Rome at one of its greatest moments: the baroque high point of 1630.

  • - Bunraku Meets Motown
    av Lee Breuer
    346,-

  • av Ulrike Almut Sandig
    175 - 195,-

    The poems of Ulrike Almut Sandig are at once simple and fantastic. This new collection finds her on her way to imaginary territories. Thick of It charts a journey through two hemispheres to "the center of the world" and navigates a "thicket" that is at once the world, the psyche, and language itself.

  • - A Breviary
    av Raoul Schrott
    258,-

  • - Paratopic Performances of Gender and State
    av Anurima Banerji
    346,-

  • av Theresa Smalec
    291,-

  • - Six Plays
    av Oriza Hirata
    385,-

    Citizens of Tokyo is the first collection in English of plays by one of Japan's most important contemporary playwrights, Oriza Hirata, whose works have been performed all over the world. The first part of Citizens of Tokyo, "At Home and Abroad," presents two plays--Toyko Notes and Kings of the Road--that are exemplary of Hirata's unique neorealist dramaturgy, which created one of the most important trends in Japanese theater since the 1990s: Quiet Theatre. The second part of the book presents two short comedies that satirize the politics of decision-making in Japan and abroad: "Loyal Rōnin: The Working Girls' Version" and "The Yalta Conference." The final part, "Robots and Androids are People Too," presents two short plays created in collaboration with Ishiguro Hiroshi and the Osaka University Robot Theatre Project. The plays are accompanied by a context-setting introduction from editor and cotranslator M. Cody Poulton.

  • - And Other Stories
    av Abul Bashar
    199,-

    Collection of 10 short stories that focus exclusively on the lives of Bengali Muslims.

  • av Abdourahman A. Waberi
    175,-

    The poems in this new volume by Abdourahman A. Waberi are introspective and inquisitive, reflecting a deep spiritual bond--with words, with the history of Islam and its great poets, with the landscapes those poets walked, among which Waberi grew up. The sage yearns here for the simplicity of each individual moment to somehow become eternal, for the histories and people that are part of him--his mother, his wife, his unborn child, the sacred texts that ground his being--to come together harmoniously within him, and to emerge through his words. Lyrical and personal, but with powerful historical and cultural resonances, these poems are the work of a master at the height of his powers.

  • av Yasser Abdellatif
    244,-

    Novel set primarily amid the political turmoil of 1990s Egypt.

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