0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R100 - R250 (4)
  • R250 - R500 (34)
  • R500 - R1,000 (4)
  • R1,000 - R2,500 (1)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 25 of 43 matches in All Departments

The Blue Lantern (Paperback): Viktor Pelevin The Blue Lantern (Paperback)
Viktor Pelevin; Translated by Andrew Bromfield
R305 Discovery Miles 3 050 Ships in 12 - 17 working days
Omon Ra (Paperback): Viktor Pelevin Omon Ra (Paperback)
Viktor Pelevin; Translated by Andrew Bromfield
R271 Discovery Miles 2 710 Ships in 12 - 17 working days
Monday Starts on Saturday (Paperback): Boris Strugatsky, Arkady Strugatsky Monday Starts on Saturday (Paperback)
Boris Strugatsky, Arkady Strugatsky; Translated by Andrew Bromfield; Foreword by Adam Roberts; Afterword by Boris Strugatsky
R440 R368 Discovery Miles 3 680 Save R72 (16%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Witch's Tears and Other Stories (Paperback): Nina Sadur Witch's Tears and Other Stories (Paperback)
Nina Sadur; Translated by Andrew Bromfield
R275 Discovery Miles 2 750 Ships in 12 - 17 working days
A Poet and Bin-Laden (Paperback): Hamid Ismailov A Poet and Bin-Laden (Paperback)
Hamid Ismailov; Translated by Andrew Bromfield
R542 R474 Discovery Miles 4 740 Save R68 (13%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The story begins on the eve of 9/11, with the narrator's haunting description of the airplane attack on the Twin Towers as seen on TV while he is on holiday in Central Asia. Subsequent chapters shift backwards and forwards in time, but two main themes emerge: the rise of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan under the charismatic but reclusive leadership of Tahir Yuldash and Juma Namangani; and the main character, poet Belgi's movement from the outer edge of the circle, from the mountains of Osh, into the inner sanctum of al-Qaeda, and ultimately to a meeting with Sheikh bin Laden himself. His journey begins with a search for a Sufi spiritual master and ends in guerrilla warfare, and it is this tension between a transcendental and a violent response to oppression, between the book and the bomb, that gives the novel its specific poignancy. Along the way, Ismailov provides wonderfully vivid accounts of historical events (as witnessed by Belgi) such as the siege of Kunduz, the breakout from Shebergan prison - a kind of Afghan Guantanamo - and the insurgency in the Ferghana Valley.

Boys in Zinc (Paperback): Svetlana Alexievich Boys in Zinc (Paperback)
Svetlana Alexievich; Translated by Andrew Bromfield 1
R312 R254 Discovery Miles 2 540 Save R58 (19%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days

Haunting stories from the Soviet-Afghan War from the winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature - A new translation of Zinky Boys based on the revised text - From 1979 to 1989 Soviet troops engaged in a devastating war in Afghanistan that claimed thousands of casualties on both sides. While the Soviet Union talked about a 'peace-keeping' mission, the dead were shipped back in sealed zinc coffins. Boys in Zinc presents the honest testimonies of soldiers, doctors and nurses, mothers, wives and siblings who describe the lasting effects of war. Weaving together their stories, Svetlana Alexievich shows us the truth of the Soviet-Afghan conflict: the killing and the beauty of small everyday moments, the shame of returned veterans, the worries of all those left behind. When it was first published in the USSR in 1991, Boys in Zinc sparked huge controversy for its unflinching, harrowing insight into the realities of war.

The Doomed City - Volume 25 (Paperback): Arkady Strugatsky, Boris Strugatsky The Doomed City - Volume 25 (Paperback)
Arkady Strugatsky, Boris Strugatsky; Translated by Andrew Bromfield; Foreword by Dmitry Glukhovsky
R634 R538 Discovery Miles 5 380 Save R96 (15%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Monday Starts on Saturday (Paperback): Arkady Strugatsky, Boris Strugatsky Monday Starts on Saturday (Paperback)
Arkady Strugatsky, Boris Strugatsky; Translated by Andrew Bromfield 1
R313 R143 Discovery Miles 1 430 Save R170 (54%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

When young programmer Alexander Ivanovich Privalov picks up two hitchhikers while driving in Karelia, he is drawn into the mysterious world of the National Institute for the Technology of Witchcraft and Thaumaturgy, where research into magic is serious business. And where science, sorcery and socialism meet, can chaos be far behind?

The Helmet of Horror - The Myth of Theseus and the Minotaur (Paperback): Victor Pelevin The Helmet of Horror - The Myth of Theseus and the Minotaur (Paperback)
Victor Pelevin; Translated by Andrew Bromfield
R436 R364 Discovery Miles 3 640 Save R72 (17%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

A cyber-age retelling of the myth of Theseus and the Minotaur from one of Russia's most exciting young writers.
Labyrinth (noun): An intricate structure of intercommunicating passages, through which it is difficult to find one's way without a clue; a maze.
They have never met; they have been assigned strange pseudonyms; they inhabit identical rooms which open out onto very different landscapes; and they have entered into a dialogue which they cannot escape - a discourse defined and destroyed by the Helmet of Horror. Its wearer is the dominant force they call Asterisk, a force for good and ill in which the Minotaur is forever present and Theseus is the great unknown.
Victor Pelevin has created a mesmerising world where the surreal and the hyperreal collide. The Helmet of Horror is structured according to the internet exchanges of the twenty-first century, yet instilled with the figures and narratives of classical mythology. It is a labyrinthine examination of epistemological uncertainty that radically reinvents the myth of Theseus and the Minotaur for an age where information is abundant but knowledge seems ultimately unattainable.

The Dancer from Khiva - One Muslim Woman's Quest for Freedom (Paperback, Library): Bibish The Dancer from Khiva - One Muslim Woman's Quest for Freedom (Paperback, Library)
Bibish; Translated by Andrew Bromfield
R379 R315 Discovery Miles 3 150 Save R64 (17%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

An unflinchingly honest memoir, The Dancer from Khiva is a true story that offers remarkable insights into Central Asian culture through the harrowing experiences of a young girl. In a narrative that flows like a late-night confession, Bibish recounts her story. Born to an impoverished family in a deeply religious village in Uzbekistan, Bibish was named "Hadjarbibi" in honor of her grandfather's hadj, or pilgrimage to Mecca. But the holy name did not protect her from being gang-raped at the age of eight and left for dead in the desert. Bibish's tenacity helped her survive, but in the coming years, that same tough-spiritedness caused her to be beaten, victimized, and ostracized from her family and community. Despite the seeming hopelessness of being a woman in such a cruelly patriarchal society, Bibish secretly cultivated her own dreams--of dancing, of raising a family, and of telling her story to the world. The product of incredible resilience and spirit, The Dancer from Khiva is a harrowing, clear-eyed dispatch from a land where thousands of such stories have been silenced. It is a testament to Bibish's fierce will and courage: the searing, fast-paced tale of a woman who risked everything.

The Blue Lantern (Paperback, Main): Victor Pelevin The Blue Lantern (Paperback, Main)
Victor Pelevin; Translated by Andrew Bromfield
R276 R235 Discovery Miles 2 350 Save R41 (15%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The short stories of Victor Pelevin are as individual, reality-warping and endlessly inventive as his novels, moving effortlessly between different genres and moods, bursting with absurd wit and existential satire. In The Blue Lantern he brings together sex-change prostitutes, melancholy animals and a cabinful of young boys obsessed by death. Sidestepping the world we take for granted, these stories show in miniature the fantastical talent for which the Observer acclaimed Pelevin's work as 'the real thing, fiction of world class'.

Redemption (Hardcover): Friedrich Gorenstein Redemption (Hardcover)
Friedrich Gorenstein; Translated by Andrew Bromfield; Introduction by Emil Draitser
R766 R727 Discovery Miles 7 270 Save R39 (5%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

It is New Year's Eve 1945 in a small Soviet town not long liberated from German occupation. Sashenka, a headstrong and self-centered teenage girl, resents her mother for taking a lover after her father's death in the war, and denounces her to the authorities for the petty theft that keeps them from going hungry. When she meets a Jewish lieutenant who has returned to bury his family, betrayed and murdered by their neighbors during the occupation, both must come to terms with the trauma that surrounds them as their relationship deepens. Redemption is a stark and powerful portrait of humanity caught up in Stalin's police state in the aftermath of the war and the Holocaust. In this short novel, written in 1967 but unpublished for many years, Friedrich Gorenstein effortlessly combines the concrete details of daily life in this devastated society with witness testimonies to the mass murder of Jews. He gives a realistic account of postwar Soviet suffering through nuanced psychological portraits of people confronted with harsh choices and a coming-of-age story underscored by the deep involvement of sexuality and violence. Interspersed are flights of philosophical consideration of the relationship between Christians and Jews, love and suffering, justice and forgiveness. A major addition to the canon of literature bearing witness to the Holocaust in the Soviet Union, Redemption is an important reckoning with anti-Semitism and Stalinist repression from a significant Soviet Jewish voice.

Sister Pelagia and the White Bulldog - A Mystery by the internationally bestselling author of The Winter Queen (Paperback):... Sister Pelagia and the White Bulldog - A Mystery by the internationally bestselling author of The Winter Queen (Paperback)
Boris Akunin; Translated by Andrew Bromfield
R474 R413 Discovery Miles 4 130 Save R61 (13%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

"Pelagia's family likeness to Father Brown and Miss Marple is marked, and reading about her supplies a similarly decorous pleasure."
-"The Literary Review"
In a remote Russian province in the late nineteenth century, Bishop Mitrofanii must deal with a family crisis. After learning that one of his great aunt's beloved and rare white bulldogs has been poisoned, the Orthodox bishop knows there is only one detective clever enough to investigate the murder: Sister Pelagia.
The bespectacled, freckled Pelagia is lively, curious, extraordinarily clumsy, and persistent. At the estate in question, she finds a whole host of suspects, any one of whom might have benefited if the old lady (who changes her will at whim) had expired of grief at the pooch's demise. There's Pyotr, the matron's grandson, a nihilist with a grudge who has fallen for the maid; Stepan, the penniless caretaker, who has sacrificed his youth to the care of the estate; Miss Wrigley, a mysterious Englishwoman who has recently been named sole heiress to the fortune; Poggio, an opportunistic and freeloading "artistic" photographer; and, most intriguingly, Naina, the old lady's granddaughter, a girl so beautiful she could drive any man to do almost anything.
As Pelagia bumbles and intuits her way to the heart of a mystery among people with faith only in greed and desire, she must bear in mind the words of Saint Paul: "Beware of dogs-and beware of evil-doers."
"Critics on both sides of the Atlantic have praised [Akunin's] clever plots, vivid characters and wit."
-"Baltimore Sun
"
"Akunin's wonderful novels are always intricately webbed and plotted."
-"The Providence Journal"

Zinky Boys - Soviet Voices from the Afghanistan War (Paperback): Svetlana Alexievich Zinky Boys - Soviet Voices from the Afghanistan War (Paperback)
Svetlana Alexievich; Translated by Andrew Bromfield
R483 R398 Discovery Miles 3 980 Save R85 (18%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

From 1979 to 1989, a million Soviet troops engaged in a devastating war in Afghanistan that claimed 50,000 casualties-and the youth and humanity of many tens of thousands more. In this new translation, Zinky Boys weaves together the candid and affecting testimony of the officers and grunts, doctors and nurses, mothers, sons, and daughters who describe the war and its lasting effects. What emerges is a "masterpiece of reportage" (Timothy Snyder, New York Review of Books) that offers a unique, harrowing, and unforgettably powerful insight into the realities of war. In their Nobel citation, the Swedish Academy called "her polyphonic writings, a monument to suffering and courage in our time." "Alexievich serves no ideology, only an ideal: to listen closely enough to the ordinary voices of her time to orchestrate them into extraordinary books." -Philip Gourevitch, New Yorker

Viktor Pivovarov. The Agent in Love (Paperback): Viktor Pivovarov Viktor Pivovarov. The Agent in Love (Paperback)
Viktor Pivovarov; Illustrated by Viktor Pivovarov; Translated by Andrew Bromfield
R437 Discovery Miles 4 370 Ships in 12 - 17 working days
The Hall of the Singing Caryatids (Paperback): Victor Pelevin The Hall of the Singing Caryatids (Paperback)
Victor Pelevin; Translated by Andrew Bromfield
R263 Discovery Miles 2 630 Ships in 9 - 15 working days

After auditioning for the part as a singing geisha at a dubious bar, Lena and eleven other "lucky" girls are sent to work at a posh underground nightclub reserved exclusively for Russia's upper-crust elite. They are to be a sideshow attraction to the rest of the club's entertainment, and are billed as the "famous singing caryatids." Things only get weirder from there. Secret ointments, praying mantises, sexual escapades, and grotesque murder are quickly ushered into the plot. The Russian literary master Victor Pelevin holds nothing back, and The Hall of the Singing Caryatids, his most recent story to be translated into English, is sure to make you squirm in your seat with utter delight.

The Matiushin Case (Paperback): Oleg Pavlov The Matiushin Case (Paperback)
Oleg Pavlov; Translated by Andrew Bromfield
R314 R257 Discovery Miles 2 570 Save R57 (18%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The Matiushin Case is one of the darkest and most powerful works of fiction to appear in Russian in the last twenty years. Deriving, like Captain of the Steppe (And Other Stories, 2013), from the author's own traumatic experience as a conscript in the last years of the Soviet Union, it follows the experience of Matiushin, a young, sensitive, disoriented man, damaged first by violence in his family then by the brutality of army life in Central Asia. Indebted to the different traditions of 'labour camp prose' pioneered by Solzhenitsyn and Shalamov, the novel is, however, much more than an expose of societal ills, shocking enough though these are. Its literary achievement lies elsewhere: in the way that the horrific realities of conscript life are steeped in the unique mood of dreaminess and timelessness created by the setting and by Pavlov's prose-style and in the unique type of tension that this mood creates. Matiushin's 'crime and punishment' emerge from this tension with compelling inevitability; the victim turns killer. The hell that Oleg Pavlov describes is physical and societal, but above all psychological, and, as such, no less universal than that described by Dante or Dostoevsky.

Butterfly Skin (Paperback): Sergey Kuznetsov Butterfly Skin (Paperback)
Sergey Kuznetsov; Translated by Andrew Bromfield 1
R257 R213 Discovery Miles 2 130 Save R44 (17%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

When a brutal and sadistic serial killer begins stalking the streets of Moscow, Xenia, an ambitious young newspaper editor, takes it upon herself to attempt to solve the mystery of the killer's identity. As her obsession with the killer grows, she devises an elaborate website with the intention of ensnaring the murderer, only to discover something disturbing about herself: her own unhealthy fascination with the sexual savagery of the murders.

Black City (Paperback): Boris Akunin Black City (Paperback)
Boris Akunin; Translated by Andrew Bromfield 1
R319 R263 Discovery Miles 2 630 Save R56 (18%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days

CRIMEA, 1914 When the Tzar's head of security is assassinated, Erast Fandorin is called to investigate: the killer has been overheard mentioning a 'black city' so Fandorin and his trusty companion, Masa, head to Baku, the burgeoning Russian capital of oil. But from the moment they arrive in the city - a hotbed of corruption and greed by the Caspian Sea - they realise someone is watching their every move, and they will stop at nothing to derail their investigation. Having suffered a brutal attack and with Masa's life hanging by a thread, Fandorin is forced to rely on the help of an unexpected new ally, and he begins to suspect the plot might be part of something larger - and much more sinister. With war brewing in the Balkans and Europe's empires struggling to contain the threat of revolution, Fandorin must try and solve his most difficult case yet - before time runs out.

Leningrad (Paperback): Igor Vishnevetsky Leningrad (Paperback)
Igor Vishnevetsky; Translated by Andrew Bromfield
R264 Discovery Miles 2 640 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Closing the gap between the contemporary Russian novel and the masterpieces of the early Soviet avant-garde, this masterful mixture of prose and poetry, excerpts from private letters and diaries, and quotes from newspapers and NKVD documents, is a unique amalgam of documentary, philosophical novel, and black humor.

Sister Pelagia and the Black Monk - A Novel (Paperback): Boris Akunin Sister Pelagia and the Black Monk - A Novel (Paperback)
Boris Akunin; Translated by Andrew Bromfield
R464 R408 Discovery Miles 4 080 Save R56 (12%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

In the middle of the night, a disheveled and badly frightened monk arrives at the doorstep of Bishop Mitrofanii of Zavolzhsk, crying: "Something's wrong at the Hermitage!" The Hermitage is the centuries-old island monastery of New Ararat, known for its tradition of severely penitent monks, isolated environs, and a mental institution founded by a millionaire in self-imposed exile. Hearing the monk's eerie message, Mitrofanii's befuddled but sharp-witted ward Sister Pelagia begs to visit New Ararat and uncover the mystery. Traditions prevail-no women are allowed-and the bishop sends other wards to test their fates against the Black Monk that haunts the once serene locale. But as the Black Monk claims more victims-including Mitrofanii's envoys-Pelagia goes undercover to see exactly what person, or what spirit, is at the bottom of it all.
Fans of "Sister Pelagia and the White Bulldog," the first book in Akunin's Pelagia trilogy, will be instantly mesmerized-and frightened-by this latest foray into Zavolzhsk's spiritual underworld.
Praise:
"For all his status as a globe-circling bestseller, Akunin keeps faith in his sleekly engineered and allusive whodunnits with the classical virtues of Russian prose. . . . That polish lends his books a peculiar charm."
-The Independent (London)
"Readers can hear echoes of Leo Tolstoy, Fyodor Dostoevsky and Anton Chekov in whodunits that, because of their literary overtones, can be guiltlessly consumed as entertainment."
-Los Angeles Times

The Inhabited Island (Paperback): Arkady Strugatsky, Boris Strugatsky The Inhabited Island (Paperback)
Arkady Strugatsky, Boris Strugatsky; Translated by Andrew Bromfield
R573 R472 Discovery Miles 4 720 Save R101 (18%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days
The Helmet Of Horror (Paperback, Main): Victor Pelevin The Helmet Of Horror (Paperback, Main)
Victor Pelevin; Translated by Andrew Bromfield 2
R311 R250 Discovery Miles 2 500 Save R61 (20%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

When Ariadne helped Theseus escape the Minotaur's labyrinth with the aid of a ball of thread, she led the way for the bewildered victims of a twenty-first century minotaur. Trapped in an endless maze of Internet chatrooms, a group of mystified strangers find themselves assigned obscure aliases and commanded by the Helmet of Horror, the Minotaur himself. As they fumble their way back to reality through a mesmerising world of abundant information but little knowledge, we are forced to wonder - can technology itself be anything more than a myth?

Light-headed (Paperback): Olga Slavnikova Light-headed (Paperback)
Olga Slavnikova; Translated by Andrew Bromfield
R409 R366 Discovery Miles 3 660 Save R43 (11%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days
S.N.U.F.F. (Paperback): Victor Pelevin S.N.U.F.F. (Paperback)
Victor Pelevin; Translated by Andrew Bromfield 1
R545 R448 Discovery Miles 4 480 Save R97 (18%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days

Damilola Karpov is a pilot. Living in Byzantium, a huge sky city floating above the land of Urkaine, he makes his living as a drone pilot - capable of being a cameraman who records the events unfolding in Urkaine or, with the weapons aboard his drone, of making a newsworthy event happen for his employers: 'Big Byz Media'. His recordings are known as S.N.U.F.F.: Special Newsreel/Universal Feature Film. S.N.U.F.F. is a superb post-apocalyptic novel, exploring the conflict between the nation of Urkaine, its causes and its relationship with the city 'Big Byz' above. Contrasting poverty and luxury, low and high technology, barbarity and civilisation - while asking questions about the nature of war, the media, entertainment and humanity.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
Blinde Mol Of Wyse Uil? - Hoe Om Met…
Susan Coetzer Paperback R270 R232 Discovery Miles 2 320
Pamper Fine Cuts in Jelly - Gourmet Meat…
R12 R11 Discovery Miles 110
Aerolatte Cappuccino Art Stencils (Set…
R110 R95 Discovery Miles 950
Sylvanian Families - Walnut Squirrel…
R749 R579 Discovery Miles 5 790
Catan
 (16)
R1,150 R889 Discovery Miles 8 890
Bestway Designer Swim Ring (Multicolour…
R32 Discovery Miles 320
Shield Brake and Parts Cleaner (500ml)
R61 Discovery Miles 610
Colleen Pencil Crayons - Assorted…
 (1)
R252 Discovery Miles 2 520
Bug-A-Salt 3.0 Black Fly
 (1)
R999 Discovery Miles 9 990
Xbox One Replacement Case
 (8)
R55 Discovery Miles 550

 

Partners