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Showing 1 - 17 of
17 matches in All Departments
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Living Things
Munir Hachemi; Translated by Julia Sanches
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R260
Discovery Miles 2 600
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Living Things follows four recent graduates – Munir, G,
Ernesto and Álex – who travel from Madrid to the south of France
to work the grape harvest. Except things don't go as planned: they
end up working on an industrial chicken farm and living on a
campsite, where a general sense of menace takes hold. What follows
is a compelling and incisive examination of precarious employment,
capitalism, immigration and the mass production of living
things, all interwoven with the protagonist’s thoughts on
literature and the nature of storytelling. Genre-bending and
dystopian, Living Things is a literary eco-thriller, a
punk-like blend of Roberto Bolaño's The Savage
Detectives and Samanta Schweblin’s Fever
Dream, and heralds an exciting new voice in international
fiction.
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Permafrost (Paperback)
Eva Baltasar; Translated by Julia Sanches
bundle available
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R380
R280
Discovery Miles 2 800
Save R100 (26%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Permafrost's no-bullshit lesbian narrator is an uninhibited lover
and a wickedly funny observer of modern life. Desperate to get out
of Barcelona, she goes to Brussels, 'because a city whose symbol is
a little boy pissing was a city I knew I would like'; as an au pair
in Scotland, she develops a hatred of the colour green. And
everywhere she goes, she tries to break out of the roles set for
her by family and society, chasing escape wherever it can be found:
love affairs, travel, thoughts of suicide. Full of powerful,
physical imagery, this prize-winning debut novel by acclaimed
Catalan poet Eva Baltasar was a word-of-mouth hit in its own
language. It is a breathtakingly forthright call for women's
freedom to embrace both pleasure and solitude, and speaks boldly of
the body, of sex, and of the self.
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Boulder (Paperback)
Eva Baltasar; Translated by Julia Sanches
bundle available
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R441
R275
Discovery Miles 2 750
Save R166 (38%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Working as a cook on a merchant ship, a woman comes to know and
love Samsa, a woman who gives her the nickname 'Boulder'. When
Samsa gets a job in Reykjavik and the couple decides to move there
together, Samsa decides that she wants to have a child. She is
already forty and can't bear to let the opportunity pass her by.
Boulder is less enthused, but doesn't know how to say no - and so
finds herself dragged along on a journey that feels as thankless as
it is alien. With motherhood changing Samsa into a stranger,
Boulder must decide where her priorities lie, and whether her
yearning for freedom can truly trump her yearning for love. Once
again, Eva Baltasar demonstrates her pre-eminence as a chronicler
of queer voices navigating a hostile world - and in prose as
brittle and beautiful as an ancient saga.
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Dogs of Summer - A Novel
Andrea Abreu; Translated by Julia Sanches
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R380
R306
Discovery Miles 3 060
Save R74 (19%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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"[A] firecracker of a debut . . . Abreu's novel, in Julia Sanches's
sparkling translation, is a revelation, perfectly capturing a
festering summer of meltdowns and shrinking horizons."
—The New York Times My Brilliant Friend meets Blue is the
Warmest Color in this lyrical debut novel set in a working-class
neighborhood of the Canary Islands—a story about two girls coming
of age in the early aughts and a friendship that simmers into
erotic desire over the course of one hot summer. High near the
volcano of northern Tenerife, an endless ceiling of cloud cover
traps the working class in an abject, oppressive heat. Far away
from the island’s posh resorts, two girls dream of hitching a
ride down to the beach and escaping their horizonless town.
It’s summer, 2005, and our ten-year-old narrator is consumed by
thoughts of her best friend Isora. Isora is rude and bossy, but
she’s also vivacious and brave; grownups prefer her, and boys do,
too. That's why sometimes she gets jealous of Isora, who already
has hair on her vagina and soft, round breasts. But she's
definitely not jealous that Isora’s mother is dead, nor that
Isora's fat, foul-mouthed grandmother has her on a diet, so that
she is constantly sticking her fingers down her throat. Besides,
she would do anything for Isora: gorge herself on cakes when her
friend wants to watch, follow her to the bathroom when she takes a
shit, log into chat rooms to swap dirty instant messages with
strangers. But increasingly, our narrator finds it hard to keep up
with Isora, who seems to be growing up at full tilt without
her—and as her submissiveness veers into a painful sexual
awakening, desire grows indistinguishable from intimate violence.
Braiding prose poetry with bachata lyrics and the gritty humor of
Canary dialect, Dogs of Summer is a story of exquisite yearning, a
brutal picture of girlhood and a love song written for the vital
community it portrays.
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Motherland - A Memoir
Paula Ramón; Translated by Julia Sanches, Jennifer Shyue
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R284
R218
Discovery Miles 2 180
Save R66 (23%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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From Venezuelan reporter Paula Ramón comes a powerful memoir about
one woman’s complicated relationship with her family as her
beloved homeland collapses into ruin. In the span of a generation,
oil-rich Venezuela spiraled into a dire state of economic collapse.
Reporter Paula Ramón experienced the crisis firsthand as her
middle-class family saw their quality of life deteriorate. Public
services no longer functioned. Money lost its value. Her mother
couldn’t afford to buy food, which was increasingly scarce. The
once-prosperous country fell into ruin. Like many others,
Ramón’s family struggled to survive each day in their beloved
city, Maracaibo—until, one by one, they each made the unbearable
choice to leave the home they love. In the end, it was Ramón’s
mother, a widow, who stayed behind, loyal to the only home she’d
ever known. In this heartbreaking mix of lived experience, family
chronicle, and journalistic essay, Paula Ramón explores the
anguish of her own relationships set against the staggering
collapse of a country. Motherland is a uniquely human account about
the ties that bind—and the fragile concept of home.
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Eartheater - A Novel (Paperback)
Dolores Reyes; Translated by Julia Sanches
bundle available
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R347
R233
Discovery Miles 2 330
Save R114 (33%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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NAMED A "FALL 2020 MUST-READ" AND ONE OF THE "BEST BOOKS OF FALL
2020" BY TIME, VULTURE, THE BOSTON GLOBE, COSMOPOLITAN, WIRED, TOR
AND MORE Electrifying and provocative, visceral and profound, a
powerful literary debut novel about a young woman whose compulsion
to eat earth gives her visions of murdered and missing people-an
imaginative synthesis of mystery and magical realism that explores
the dark tragedies of ordinary lives. Set in an unnamed slum in
contemporary Argentina, Eartheater is the story of a young woman
who finds herself drawn to eating the earth-a compulsion that gives
her visions of broken and lost lives. With her first taste of dirt,
she learns the horrifying truth of her mother's death. Disturbed by
what she witnesses, the woman keeps her visions to herself. But
when Eartheater begins an unlikely relationship with a withdrawn
police officer, word of her ability begins to spread, and soon
desperate members of her community beg for her help, anxious to
uncover the truth about their own loved ones. Surreal and haunting,
spare yet complex, Eartheater is a dark, emotionally resonant tale
told from a feminist perspective that brilliantly explores the
stories of those left behind-the women enduring the pain of
uncertainty, whose lives have been shaped by violence and loss.
Translated from the Spanish by Julia Sanches
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Undiscovered (Hardcover)
Gabriela Wiener; Translated by Julia Sanches
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R488
Discovery Miles 4 880
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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"Wiener has rescued an intimate story from the family archive, a
story that is also the infamous history of our continent, with her
trademark intelligence and irreverent humor. Her prose, sober and
forward, is fresh air; her view allows us to be testimonies of
Latin America's cycles of plundering and looting."--Valeria
Luiselli, author of The Lost Children Archive and Tell Me How It
Ends An award-winning Peruvian journalist and writer delivers her
stunning English breakthrough, blending fact and fiction in an
autobiographical novel that faces the legacy of colonialism through
one woman's family ties to both the colonized and colonizer. Alone
in a museum in Paris, Gabriela Wiener finds herself confronted by
her complicated family heritage. Visiting an exhibition of
pre-Columbian artifacts, she peers at countless sculptures of
Indigenous faces each nearly identical to her own and recognizes
herself in them - but the man responsible for pillaging them was
her own great-great-grandfather, Austrian colonial explorer Charles
Wiener. Wiener's "grand" contribution to history: the near
rediscovery of Machu Picchu, nearly 4,000 plundered artifacts, a
book about Peru, and a bastard child. In the wake of her father's
death, Gabriela begins to unpack the legacy that is her birthright.
From the brutal racism she encounters in her ancestor Charles's
book to her father's infidelity, she traces a cycle of abandonment,
jealousy and colonial violence, in turn reframing her own personal
struggles with desire, love, and race. As she explores the history
of two continents, her investigation brings her closer and closer
to the more intimate realm where both colonizer and colonized
ultimately converge- the body- and her own desire to free it.
Guided by a penetrating eye and fearsome wit, Undiscovered embarks
the reader on a quest to pick up the pieces of something shattered
long ago in the hopes of making it whole once again. Probing wounds
both personal and historical, Undiscovered is a culminating labor
for our age, an earnest attempt to decolonize one's own desire.
Translated by Julia Sanches
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Slash and Burn (Paperback)
Claudia Hernandez; Translated by Julia Sanches
bundle available
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R295
Discovery Miles 2 950
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Shortlisted for the 2022 Queen Sofia Spanish Institute Translation
Prize Shortlisted for the Premio Valle-Inclan prize for its
translation Through war and its aftermaths, a woman fights to keep
her daughters safe. Like peasants through the ages, she desperately
slashes and burns in order to make a place for her children to
return to. A country girl sees her village sacked and her beloved
father disappeared. She is taken to the mountains to join the
guerrillas, who force her to give up the baby she conceives.
Surviving the rebellion, and now a woman, she sets out to find her
daughter, travelling across the Atlantic with meagre resources. She
returns to a community in which civilians, the militia and the
ex-guerrilla fighters have to live together in a society riddled
with distrust, fear and hypocrisy. Hernandez's narrators have the
level gaze of ordinary women reckoning with extraordinary hardship.
Denouncing the ruthless machismo of combat with quiet intelligence,
Slash and Burn creates a suspenseful, slow-burning revelation of
rural life in the aftermath of political trauma.
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Dogs of Summer (Paperback)
Andrea Abreu; Translated by Julia Sanches
bundle available
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R210
Discovery Miles 2 100
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Translated by Julia Sanches. 'A rich and prophetic world of women
and low, grey clouds that merge with the sea. Pure poetry' Pilar
Quintana 'Andrea Abreu is a lively meteorite in the landscape of
Hispanic Literature' Fernanda Melchor 'I am overwhelmed. What a
marvellous book, what a miracle' Sara Mesa It is June and Shit is
sad. She knows she will not get to leave her neighbourhood that
summer, and the beach is far, far away. And that clouds like the
bottom of a donkey's belly will hover all summer over her town,
high among the volcanoes of northern Tenerife. But Shit - our
nine-year-old narrator - has a best friend, Isora. Shit likes
everything about Isora. The colour of her arms and her hair and her
eyes. Her handwriting and the way she wrote the letter g with a
huge tail. The way she called her shit because poop was a beautiful
thing like the mist round the pines. But she envies her too. Envies
her grits and gut. The way she talks to grown ups. The fact that
she had got her period and had pubes on her minky. As the summer
goes on, Shit finds it increasingly hard to keep up with Isora -
one year older and growing up at full tilt without her. When Shit's
submissiveness veers into obsession and a painful sexual awakening,
desire becomes indistinguishable from intimate violence. Braiding
prose poetry with bachata lyrics and the gritty humour of Canary
dialect, Dogs of Summer is a brutal picture of girlhood in the 90s
and a story, told with exquisite yearning, of a friendship that
simmers into erotic desire over the course of one hot summer.
"This book is fearless and luminous and full of grace; it travels
to the edge of death and finds life there. Its attention to the
particulars of love - between the ones who will go and the ones
they will leave - is something close to sublime."--Leslie Jamison,
author of "The Empathy Exams"A nurse sleeps at the bedside of his
dying patients; a wife deceives her husband by never telling him he
has cancer; a bedridden man has to be hidden from his demented and
amorous eighty-year-old wife. In her poignant and genre-busting
debut, Susana Moreira Marques confronts us with our own mortality
and inspires us to think about what is important.Accompanying a
palliative care team, Moreira Marques travels to Tras-os-Montes, a
forgotten corner of northern Portugal, a rural area abandoned by
the young. Crossing great distances where eagles circle over the
roads, she visits villages where rural ways of life are
disappearing. She listens to families facing death and gives us
their stories in their words as well as through her own
meditations.Brilliantly blending the immediacy of oral history with
the sensibility of philosophical reportage, Moreira Marques's book
speaks about death in a fresh way.Susana Moreira Marques is a
writer and journalist. She was born in Oporto in 1976 and now lives
in Lisbon, where she writes for "Publico" and "Jornal de Negocios."
Between 2005 and 2010 Moreira Marques lived in London, working at
the BBC World Service while also serving as a correspondent for
Portuguese newspaper "Publico." Her journalism has won several
prizes, including the Premio AMI--Jornalismo Contra a Indiferenca
and the 2012 UNESCO "Human Rights and Integration" Journalism Award
(Portugal).Julia Sanches's translations have appeared in "Suelta,"
"The Washington Review," "Asymptote," "Two Lines," and "Revista
Machado," amongst others. She currently lives in New York City.
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Migratory Birds (Paperback)
Mariana Oliver; Translated by Julia Sanches
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R377
R312
Discovery Miles 3 120
Save R65 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Dogs of Summer (Paperback)
Andrea Abreu; Translated by Julia Sanches
bundle available
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R440
R356
Discovery Miles 3 560
Save R84 (19%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Translated by Julia Sanches. 'Andrea Abreu is a lively meteorite in
the landscape of Hispanic Literature' Fernanda Melchor 'I am
overwhelmed. What a marvellous book, what a miracle' Sara Mesa It
is June and our ten-year-old heroine is sad. She knows she will not
get to leave her neighbourhood that summer, and the beach is far,
far away. And that clouds like the bottom of a donkey's belly will
hover all summer over her town, high among the volcanoes of
northern Tenerife. But she has a best friend, Isora. And she likes
everything about Isora. The colour of her arms and her hair and her
eyes. Her handwriting and the way she writes the letter g with a
huge tail. The way she calls her Shit because poop is a beautiful
thing like the mist round the pines. But she envies her too. Envies
her grits and gut. The way she talks to grown-ups. The fact that
she has got her period and pubes on her minky. As the summer goes
on, she finds it increasingly hard to keep up with Isora - growing
up at full tilt without her. When the narrator's submissiveness
veers into obsession, desire becomes indistinguishable from
intimate violence. Braiding prose poetry with bachata lyrics and
the gritty humour of Canary dialect, Dogs of Summer is a brutal
picture of girlhood in the nineties and a story of a friendship
that simmers into erotic desire over the course of one hot summer.
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Amora - Stories (Paperback)
Natalia Borges Polesso; Translated by Julia Sanches
bundle available
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R268
R201
Discovery Miles 2 010
Save R67 (25%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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From an emerging talent comes an exquisite collection of stories
exploring the complexity of love between women, each a delicate
piece in a mosaic transcending the boundaries of literary romance.
Amora dares explore the way women love each other—the atrophy and
healing of the female spirit in response to sexual desire and
identity. These thirty-three short stories and poems, crafted with
a deliberate delicacy, each capture the candid, private moments of
women in love. Together, these stories and the women who inhabit
them reveal an illuminating portrait of the sacred female romance,
with all its nuances, complexities, burdens, and triumphs revealed.
Violence, sickness, chaos, tenderness, beauty, and freedom adorn
these pages in a mosaic of unforgettable moments, including a
lesbian granddaughter discovering unexpected commonalities with her
grandmother, a teenager’s tryst with her friend after
disenchanting sex with a boy, and an old couple’s dreamy
Sunday-morning ritual. Sweeping nearly every major Brazilian
literary prize in 2016—including the Prêmio Jabuti and Prêmio
Açorianos de Literatura—Amora has propelled Natalia Borges
Polesso to the forefront of the international literary world.
Manual basico sobre el indice y la carga glucemica. Informacion y
revision de las ultimas publicaciones cientificas internacionales.
Definicion de los conceptos basicos sobre indice glucemico y
patologias asociadas. Introduccion de un segundo libro mas clinico
sobre su aplicacion en el ejercicio fisico y la salud.
Manual basico sobre la aplicacion de propuestas nutricionales
usando el indice y la carga glucemica en deportistas y personas con
patologias asociadas al metabolismo de los carbohidratos. Esta guia
resume ampliamente los diferentes estudios cientificos existentes
sobre el tema.
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