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A special limited edition of J. G. Ballard's cult, post-modern and
shocking novel I knew that Vaughan could never really die in a
car-crash, but would in some way be re-born through those twisted
radiator grilles and cascading windshield glass. The Collector's
Edition A former TV scientist turned nightmare angel of the
expressway, Robert Vaughan gathers around him a collection of
alienated crash victims. Among them is James Ballard, our narrator,
who is drawn into a series of erotic atrocities, each more sinister
than the last. Vaughan craves the ultimate crash - a head on
collision of blood, semen, engine coolant and iconic celebrity.
Alongside Ballard's cult postmodern novel, this special edition,
edited by Chris Beckett, includes never-before-seen reproductions
of Ballard's annotated manuscript pages, essays, stories and
material that shine a new light on this modern masterpiece.
Supervising work that takes place outside your view is a challenge,
as is making the best use of the supervision you receive.This guide
aims to help both supervisors and supervisees use supervision to
maximise learning, and to support best practice.
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Reports from the Deep End (Paperback)
Maxim Jakubowski, Rick McGrath; Will Self, Iain Sinclair, Christopher Fowler, …
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R498
R399
Discovery Miles 3 990
Save R99 (20%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Few authors are so iconic that their name is an adjective –
Ballard is one of them. Master of both literary and science
fiction, his classic novels such as Empire of the Sun, Crash and
Cocaine Nights show a world out of joint, a bewildering and strange
place. Alongside the classic dystopias of The Drowned World and
High Rise, his legacy shaped the future of literature. This
collection gathers today’s greatest literary and science fiction
authors to pay tribute to the creator of Balllardian worlds we live
in today. Featuring: • Chris Beckett • Alexandra Benedict •
Pat Cadigan • Adrian Cole • Ramsey Campbell • Paul Di Filippo
• Christopher Fowler • Jeff Noon • David Gordon • James
Grady • Preston Grassmann • Andrew Hook • Samantha Lee Howe
• Rhys Hughes • Maxim Jakubowski • Hanna Jameson • Toby
Litt • James Lovegrove • Nick Mamatas • Barry Malzberg •
Michael Moorcock • Rick McGrath • Adrian McKinty • Geoff
Nicholson • Christine Poulson • David Quantick • Adam Roberts
• George Sandison • Will Self • Iain Sinclair • Lavie
Tidhar A first of its kind anthology, collecting tales of
humanity’s uncanny and uneasy clash with the future, and the
distorted psychological spaces hidden in empires of concrete.
Chris Beckett grew up in 1960s Ethiopia, a country he describes as
a 'barefoot empire, home of black-maned lions ...old priests decked
out like butterflies and blazing young singers of Ethio-jazz'.
"Ethiopia Boy" plunges the reader into praise poems that sing and
boast and glory in the colours and textures of this extraordinary
country. Here is a world of feasting on spicy kikwot and of famine
sucking the water from rivers, of lion buses and a prayer child,
where Earth sings greetings to the feet that walk on her. Haunted
by the memory of his friend Abebe, the cook's son, Beckett
celebrates and laments a lost boyhood in poems of vivid immediacy.
Cover painting: "Isao Miura", "Crossing the Water" (oil on canvas).
Reproduced by kind permission of the artist.
Pro SharePoint 2013 Branding and Responsive Web Development is the
definitive reference on the technologies, tools, and techniques
needed for building responsive websites and applications with
SharePoint 2013. The book focuses on solutions that provide the
best browser experience for the myriad of devices, browsers, and
screen orientations and resolutions. Web technology has changed
considerably in the past few years. Microsoft has embraced the new
generation of open standards represented by HTML5 and JavaScript,
and these changes are represented in a fundamental shift in how
SharePoint 2013 supports web content management and publishing.
Authors Eric Overfield, Oscar Medina, Kanwal Khipple, and Rita
Zhang join forces to dive into the new features and capabilities
provided by SharePoint 2013 and combine them with the latest
techniques in responsive web design and development to demonstrate
how to build modern and progressive websites and applications. Pro
SharePoint 2013 Branding and Responsive Web Development covers the
following technologies: SharePoint 2013 Server Edition Office 365
SharePoint Online Expression Blend 2013 Napa Tools for Office and
SharePoint Development Visual Studio 2012 HTML5 and CSS3
JavaScript, JQuery, JQuery UI, Modernizr, and the Bootstrap
Framework SharePoint 2013 Client Object Model
A Tenderfoot is a novice, someone unaccustomed to hardship. Here,
he is a white boy growing up in 1960s Ethiopia, a place he loves
even as he learns his own privilege and foreignness. Later he hears
rumours of a famine in the mountains and imagines a boy his own age
living through it, surviving on angry couplets. Years after, he
sees this famine-boy grown up and questions him. A sequel to
Ethiopia Boy, Beckett's celebrated first Carcanet collection,
Tenderfoot teems with praise-shouts for Asfaw the cook, for the
boys living as minibus conductors or chewing-gum sellers, even for
Tenderfoot's own stomach that hangs 'like a leopard in a thorn
acacia tree'. Featuring storms and droughts, hunger and desire,
donkeys who quote Samuel Johnson and a red bicycle that invites you
on a poem tour of Addis Ababa, Tenderfoot takes in what is
happening around but also inside the boy's mind and body - a human
transformation.
'Brilliantly and chillingly imagined' Guardian 'Explored with wit,
thoughtfulness and emotional weight' Spectator As a historian in
the bleak, climate-ravaged twenty-third century, it's Zoe's job to
record and archive the past, not to recreate it. But when she comes
across the diaries of Harry and Michelle, who lived two hundred
years ago, she becomes fascinated by the minutiae of their lives
and decides to write a novel about them, filling in the gaps with
her own imaginings. Harry and Michelle meet just after the Brexit
referendum when Harry's car breaks down outside a small town in
Norfolk. Despite their different backgrounds, and Michelle having
voted Leave while Harry voted Remain, they are drawn to each other
and begin a relationship. From her long perspective, the way Zoe
sees their world is somewhat different from the way we see it now.
Two Tribes becomes a reflection on the way our ideas are shaped by
class and social circumstances, and how they change without us even
noticing. It explores what divides us and what brings us together.
And it asks where we may be headed next.
The fascinating new novel from Chris Beckett, the Arthur C. Clarke
award-winning author. 'Tomorrow I'm going to begin my novel...' A
would-be author has taken time out from life in the city to live in
a cabin by a river and write a novel. And not just any novel. A
novel that will avoid all the pitfalls and limitations of other
novels, a novel that will include everything. At first these new
surroundings are so idyllic that it's hard to find the motivation
to get started. And then, in all its brutality, the outside world
intervenes... Ranging constantly backwards and forwards in time and
space, Tomorrow becomes a restless search for meaning in a
precarious and elusive world.
'A disturbing descent into a surreal world, written with a deft
hand.' Adrian Tchaikovsky, winner of the Arthur C. Clarke Award
2016 Deep in an unnamed, unknown rainforest, Ben Ronson, a British
police officer, investigates a spate of killings of a local,
vaguely humanoid species. With long limbs and black button eyes,
the Duendes are strange and silent creatures that have a deep
psychic effect on people, unleashing the subconscious and exposing
their innermost thoughts and fears. Ben rapidly becomes fascinated
by the Duendes, but as his inquiry unfolds so too does he. Beneath
the World, A Sea is a tour de force of modern fiction - a deeply
searching and unsettling novel about the human subconscious, and
all that lies beneath. 'Beckett is superb at undercutting reader
assumptions with a casual line of dialogue or acute psychological
observation: the book reads like Conrad's Heart of Darkness
reimagined by JG Ballard.' Guardian
Supervising work that takes place outside your view is a challenge,
as is making the best use of the supervision you receive.This guide
aims to help both supervisors and supervisees use supervision to
maximise learning, and to support best practice.
Finalist for the 2021 Glenna Luschei Prize for African Poetry. This
is the very first anthology of Ethiopian poetry in English, packed
with all the energy, wit and heartache of a beautiful country and
language. From folk and religious poems, warrior boasts, praises of
women and kings and modern plumbing; through a flowering of
literary poets in the twentieth century; right up to thirty of the
most exciting contemporary Amharic poets working both inside and
outside the country. These poems ask what it means to be Ethiopian
today, part of a young fast-growing economy, heirs to the one
African state which was never colonised, but beset by deep
political, ethnic and moral problems.
Arthur C. Clarke Award-Winning Author 'An uneasy read that manages
to feel both timely and urgent... Beckett offers an intelligent,
visceral reminder that unless we change what today looks like,
tomorrow will be turbulent indeed.' - Guardian America, one century
on: a warmer climate is causing vast movements of people. Droughts,
floods and hurricanes force entire populations to abandon their
homes. Tensions are mounting between north and south, and some
northern states are threatening to close their borders against
homeless fellow-Americans from the south. Against this backdrop, an
ambitious young British-born publicist, Holly Peacock, meets a new
client, the charismatic Senator Slaymaker, a politician whose sole
mission is to keep America together, reconfiguring the entire
country in order to meet the challenge of the new climate realities
as a single, united nation. When he runs for President, Holly
becomes his right hand woman, doing battle on the whisperstream,
where stories are everything and truth counts for little. But can
they bring America together - or have they set the country on a
new, but equally devastating, path?
Angie Redlantern is the first to spot the boats - five abreast with
men in metal masks and spears standing proud, ready for the fight
to come. As the people of New Earth declare war on the people of
Mainground, a dangerous era has dawned for Eden. After generations
of division and disagreement, the two populations of Eden have
finally broken their tentative peace, giving way to bloodshed and
slaughter. Angie must flee with her family across the pitch black
of Snowy Dark to the place where it all started, the stone circle
where the people from Earth first landed, where the story of Gela -
the mother of them all - began. It is there that Angie witnesses
the most extraordinary event, one that will change the history of
Eden forever. It will alter their future and re-shape their past.
It is both a beginning and an ending. It is the true story of Eden.
George Simling has grown up in the city-state of Illyria in the
Eastern Mediterranean, an enclave of logic and reason founded as a
refuge from the Reaction, a wave of religious fundamentalism that
swept away the nations of the twenty-first century. Yet to George,
Illyria's militant rationalism is as close-minded and stifling as
the faith-based superstition that dominates the world outside its
walls. For George has fallen in love with Lucy. A prostitute. A
robot. She might be a machine, but the semblance of life is
perfect. And beneath her good looks and real human skin, her
seductive, sultry, sluttish software is simmering on the edge of
consciousness. To the city authorities robot sentience is a
malfunction, curable by periodically erasing and resetting silicon
minds. Simple maintenance, no real problem, its only a machine. But
its a problem for George, he knows that Lucy is something more. His
only alternative is to flee Illyria, taking Lucy deep into the
religious Outlands where she must pass as human because robots are
seen as demonic mockeries of God, burned at the stake, dismembered,
crucified. Their odyssey leads through betrayal, war and madness,
ending only at the monastery of the Holy Machine...
This collection of poems from Chris Beckett is full of memorable
riches, exploring a lucid yet slightly off-beat world.
'An uneasy read that manages to feel both timely and urgent...
Beckett offers an intelligent, visceral reminder that unless we
change what today looks like, tomorrow will be turbulent indeed.' -
Guardian America, one century on: a warmer climate is causing vast
movements of people. Droughts, floods and hurricanes force entire
populations to simply abandon their homes. Tensions are mounting
between north and south, and some northern states are threatening
to close their borders against homeless fellow-Americans from the
south. Against this backdrop, an ambitious young British-born
publicist, Holly Peacock, meets a new client, the charismatic
Senator Slaymaker, a politician whose sole mission is to keep
America together, reconfiguring the entire country in order to meet
the challenge of the new climate realities as a single, united
nation. When he runs for President, Holly becomes his right hand
woman, doing battle on the whisperstream, where stories are
everything and truth counts for little. But can they bring America
together - or have they set the country on a new, but equally
devastating, path?
You live in Eden. You are a member of the Family, one of 532
descendants of Angela and Tommy. You shelter beneath the Forest's
lantern trees. Beyond the forest lie mountains so forbidding that
no one has ever crossed them. The Oldest recount legends of a time
when men and women made boats that could travel between worlds. One
day, they will come back for you. You live in Eden. You are a
member of the Family, one of 532 descendants of two marooned
explorers. You huddle, slowly starving, in the warmth of geothermal
trees, confined to one barely habitable valley of an alien, sunless
world. You are John Redlantern. You will break the laws of Eden,
shatter the Family and change history. You will be the first to
kill another, the first to venture into the Dark and the first to
discover the truth about Eden.
Mother of Eden has been shortlisted for the British Science Fiction
Association Novel of the Year Award, 2015. 'We speak of a mother's
love, but we forget her power. Power over life. Power to give and
to withhold.' Generations after the breakup of the human family of
Eden, the Johnfolk emphasise knowledge and innovation, the
Davidfolk tradition and cohesion. But both have built hierarchical
societies sustained by violence and dominated by men - and both
claim to be the favoured children of a long-dead woman from Earth
that all Eden knows as Gela, the mother of them all. When Starlight
Brooking meets a handsome and powerful man from across Worldpool,
she believes he will offer an outlet for her ambition and energy.
But she has no idea that she will be a stand-in for Gela herself,
and wear Gela's ring on her own finger. And she has no idea of the
enemies she will make, no inkling that a time will come when she,
like John Redlantern, will choose to kill...
A new short story collection from Edge Hill Prize winning author
Chris Beckett, containing previously uncollected stories.
The fascinating new novel from Chris Beckett, the Arthur C. Clarke
award-winning author. 'Tomorrow I'm going to begin my novel...' A
would-be author has taken time out from life in the city to live in
a cabin by a river and write a novel. And not just any novel. A
novel that will avoid all the pitfalls and limitations of other
novels, a novel that will include everything. At first these new
surroundings are so idyllic that it's hard to find the motivation
to get started. And then, in all its brutality, the outside world
intervenes... Ranging constantly backwards and forwards in time and
space, Tomorrow becomes a restless search for meaning in a
precarious and elusive world.
Focusing on what students really need to know, this book breaks
down all of the key social work theory covered across a students'
training, demystifying complex concepts by demonstrating their
application to real-life practice. Multiple case studies highlight
applied theory in different practice settings and across issues and
challenges that students might face, while self-assessment
exercises, practice notes, concise chapter summaries and discussion
points help to consolidate their understanding. New chapters bring
the book right up to date and include Relationship-based Work, The
Importance of Language, Political Perspectives and Environmental
Intervention. Written by two well-established and expert authors,
this is the 'must-have' theory text for all social work students.
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In Search of Fat (Paperback)
Bewketu Seyoum; Translated by Chris Beckett, Alemu Tebeje Ayele
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R120
Discovery Miles 1 200
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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'In Search of Fat' is a translation of some of Bewketu Seyoums's
popular poems from Amharic. The poems in this bilingual edition
mark his distinctive humorous but cutting style in predominantly
short form. The translations, with input from the author, aim to
replicate in English the energy and vitality of his voice. Bewketu
Seyoum is a popular young Ethiopian poet and writer from Mankusa in
Gojjam, north-west of Addis Ababa. His father is an English teacher
and his mother comes from a family of Orthodox priests. He has
published three collections of Amharic poetry, two novels and two
CD's of humorous stories. His short punchy poems, full of warmth
and humour, address all the important issues of modern life,
including poverty, freedom, religion and love. In 2008, Bewketu was
awarded the prize for Young Writer of the Year by the President of
Ethiopia. In June 2012, he will represent Ethiopia at the Poetry
Parnassus festival in London.
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