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Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
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The Birthday Party (Paperback)
Laurent Mauvignier; Translated by Daniel Becker
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R494
R451
Discovery Miles 4 510
Save R43 (9%)
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Ships in 9 - 17 working days
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Buried deep in rural France, little remains of the isolated hamlet
of the Three Lone Girls, save a few houses and a curiously
assembled quartet: Patrice Bergogne, inheritor of his family’s
farm; his wife, Marion; their daughter, Ida; and their neighbour,
Christine, an artist. While Patrice plans a surprise for his
wife’s fortieth birthday, inexplicable events start to disrupt
the hamlet’s quiet existence: anonymous, menacing letters, an
unfamiliar car rolling up the driveway. And as night falls,
strangers stalk the houses, unleashing a nightmarish chain of
events. Told in rhythmic, propulsive prose that
weaves seamlessly from one consciousness to the next over the
course of a day, Laurent Mauvignier’s The Birthday Party is a
deft unravelling of the stories we hide from others and from
ourselves, a gripping tale of the violent irruptions of the past
into the present, written by a major contemporary French writer.
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In the Crowd (Paperback, Main)
Laurent Mauvignier; Translated by Shaun Whiteside
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R316
R287
Discovery Miles 2 870
Save R29 (9%)
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Ships in 9 - 17 working days
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The Heysel Stadium, Brussels, May 1985. Jeff and Tonino, two
Parisian football fans with serious drinking habits, are on their
way to the European Cup final between Liverpool and Juventus. So
too are newlyweds Tana and Francesco; troubled young couple Gabriel
and Virginie; and Liverpool supporter Geoff Andrewson, travelling
with his brothers. As these four groups of characters cross paths,
and as the excitement of the build-up gives way to horrific
tragedy, their lives and relationships are changed forever.
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The Wound (Paperback)
Laurent Mauvignier; Translated by David Ball, Nicole Ball; Foreword by Nick Flynn
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R517
R481
Discovery Miles 4 810
Save R36 (7%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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“Where is your wound?” asks Jean Genet in the lines Laurent
Mauvignier uses as an epigraph to The Wound. By the time we have
finished this four-part novel, we realize that for many the wound
lies four decades back in “the Events” that people have
tried to not talk about ever since: the Algerian War.
Chronicling the lives of two cousins—Bernard and
Rabut—both in the present and at the time of the Algerian War of
Independence in the 1960s, we get a full picture of the lasting
effects this event had on the men who were involved. Through the
fragments of their stories we see the whole history of the war: its
atrocities, its horrors, and its hatreds. Mauvignier shows readers
how the Algerian War, always present yet always repressed, has
sickened the emotional and moral life of everyone it touched—and
France itself, perhaps. The epigraph, like the novel, suggests that
wounded men may even become the wound itself.
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