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Books > Fiction > Special features > Classic fiction
Jack Reeca s hurting. Wounded three times by his old enemy,
psychopathic killer David Walker, hea s got his life back a " just
a " with the help of two fun-loving seA+/-oritas. But when Jack
starts diving for Brinks Mat gold bars in MA!laga Lakes, and is
befriended by beautiful rock sensation, Caviar, his Andalusian farm
attracts attention from all the wrong quarters, including David
Walker. The psycho has made a fresh kill, and is now branded a the
Rabbit Mana and a the Costa Killera . And then Caviar goes missinga
| With the action swinging from southern Spain to the Black Sea
coast of Turkey, the intimacies of kidnapping and revenge are fully
explored. Ita s the Stockholm syndrome, and ita s often sexual,
sometimes humorous and frequently violent. Desmond McGratha s
insight into the minds of killer captive and pursuer is
breathtaking, and in an epic showdown worthy of a Clint Eastwood
Western, we see how an armed man whoa s frightened of nothing can
harbour a secret terror a " of the beast inside himself.
A plane carrying gold ingots crashes into the sea. A boat with its
illegal cargo of drugs founders on the rocks. _ese two events shape
the future of our tough modern-day hero, Jack Harry Reec, whose
skills as a diver and willingness to take risks bring him big
pro_ts _e action takes him from Jersey, his native island, to Spain
where he lives life to the _ll, enjoying good food, excellent wine,
and the beautiful scenery with his new girlfriend and his long-time
male friend. But the relaxed and self-indulgent lifestyle does not
last long. Along the dangerous road he has followed, he has enemies
of violent, brutal men with horrifying and bloody results. An
ex-Falklands veteran. Jack is already haunted by death. Now he is
ruthless in his pursuit of vengeance for the latest tragedies. We
follow his quest to a rid his soul of angera . Carefully and
patiently, he plots a terrible revenge on his enemy. But the _nal
stage of his plan may be jeopardised. Will there be a Private
Execution? _is at time, shocking action drama is a genuinely
exciting story, full of surprises and tension right until the end.
Desmond McGrath was born in Jersey and is __y-six. He has dived the
oceans of the world for twenty-_ve years. He rited at forty-nine
and _lls his time writing songs and plays for television. Some say
he has lived life in the fast lane, having spent some time in Spain
and America, where in California there is a warrant out for his
arrest. He denies the charges! He is happily married to wife,
Barbara, and has one daughter, Angela and three grandchildren,
Kimberly, Tara and a Jack Harry Reeca . At present he is writing
the second Reec book, _e Executioner.
Isandro has left his Spanish Andalucian village to search for his
sister in Paris. There he meets members of the International
Brigade and moves to Madrid to form a protest group against
Franco's tyranny. The road ahead is long and hard and fraught with
danger ... not least the rage that burns within him, ready to
ignite in a political climate that demands a cool head...
This is a romantic tale with a sinister twist. It centres around
the life of Luke, an artist, who comes from a well to do but
dysfunctional family and has endured a troubled past relationship
with his unstable Mother. In adulthood, he meets and falls in love
with Maggie, but his love develops into a sinister obsession, and
he will stop at nothin, even murder, to conceal a dark, long buried
secret from her.
A tree and its impact on the inhabitants of a nearby cottage and
manor house over the last century or so is the theme of this
compelling tale. We enter a world where humans and spirits mingle
with sometimes surprising results. The setting is the remote but
beautiful wilds of the Yorkshire moors. You will come to understand
the harshness of the winters and the tragedy the cottage and manor
house has seen through the years; the pain and anguish of the
residents is firmly lodged in the walls of thee buildings. What
sights they have seen, what memories they hold, what a fertile
breeding ground for the host of spirits and souls that burst from
the pages of this surprising and original story. We discover a host
of beings, and have the opportunity to enter the lives of a
multitude of compelling characters as we journey from a time when
living was usually simple and unsophisticated into the end of the
last century where the focus of all our lives changed dramatically.
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Night and Day / Jacob's Room
(Paperback)
Virginia Woolf; Introduction by Dorinda Guest; Notes by Dorinda Guest; Series edited by Keith Carabine
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R120
Discovery Miles 1 200
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Virginia Woolf's second novel, Night and Day (1919), portrays the
gradual changes in a society, the patterns and conventions of which
are slowly disintegrating; where the representatives of the younger
generation struggle to forge their own way, for '... life has to be
faced: to be rejected; then accepted on new terms with rapture'.
Woolf begins to experiment with the novel form while demonstrating
her affection for the literature of the past. Jacob's Room (1922),
Woolf's third novel, marks the bold affirmation of her own voice
and search for a new form to express her view that 'the human soul
... orientates itself afresh every now & then. It is doing so
now. No one can see it whole therefore.' Jacob's life is presented
in subtle, delicate and tantalising glimpses, the novel's gaps and
silences are as replete with meaning as the wicker armchair
creaking in the empty room.
'I hate murders and I hate murderers, but I must admit that the
discovery of a bearded corpse would give a fillip to my jaded
mind.' Vivian Lestrange - celebrated author of the popular mystery
novel The Charterhouse Case and total recluse - has apparently
dropped off the face of the Earth. Reported missing by his
secretary Eleanor, whom Inspector Bond suspects to be the author
herself, it appears that crime and murder is afoot when Lestrange's
housekeeper is also found to have disappeared. Bond and Warner of
Scotland Yard set to work to investigate a murder with no body and
a potentially fictional victim, as E C R Lorac spins a twisting
tale full of wry humour and red herrings, poking some fun at her
contemporary reviewers who long suspected the Lorac pseudonym to
belong to a man (since a woman could apparently not have written
mysteries the way that she did). Incredibly rare today, this
mystery returns to print for the first time since 1935.
By the time Sir Arthur Conan Doyle had completed the twelve stories
for The Strand Magazine that are gathered together in The
Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, he was already growing tired of his
most famous creation, but the financial incentive to continue was
too great. So began the second series of stories, known as The
Memoirs; these introduced such notable characters as Holmes'
indolent brother, Mycroft, and Holmes' most dangerous adversary,
Professor James Moriarty, the 'Napoleon of Crime'. The collection
included such stories as 'The Adventure of the Resident Patient'
and 'The Adventure of the Greek Interpreter', which Doyle would
list later as amongst his favourites. It was to Moriarty that was
delegated the task of ending the career of the world's finest
consulting detective in a final, fatal encounter at The Reichenbach
Falls in Switzerland in the concluding tale, 'The Final Problem'.
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