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German Fantasia (Paperback)
Philippe Claudel; Translated by Julian Evans
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R330
R264
Discovery Miles 2 640
Save R66 (20%)
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Ships in 5 - 10 working days
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A deserting soldier treks through the torn-up countryside and
abandoned villages, trying to distance himself from the atrocities
of war. An elderly man sits beneath lime trees, remembering his
first sexual encounter one summer night with a female stranger who
whispered another man's name. A young woman takes up a job in a
care home, spending monotonous days scrubbing floors and yearning
to dance at the local nightclub. The artist Franz Marc lives on in
an imagined life as a patient at an asylum, before falling victim
to Hitler's policy of Gnadentod. Finally, a young Jewish girl, the
life she once knew destroyed, holds her memories close as she finds
refuge in wreckage of her homeland. And throughout there is the
shadowy presence of Viktor - one man or many? A looming figure in
Germany's own reckoning with its past. Through these five
interconnected stories, Philippe Claudel reflects on Germany's
complex history and the experiences of its people, dismantling the
idea of "a nation" or "a people" and exploring the malleability of
memory.
In Moments Before the Flood, Carl De Keyzer portrayed a Europe on
the cusp of drowning, flooded due to climate change. In Higher
Ground, the flood has already passed. His images show people that
have fled to the high mountains, depicting a fictional world of
tomorrow. A large portion of the work is irony, but it bears an
uncomfortably close semblance to scientific predictions of the
future. In 2006, when Keyzer first began working on Moments Before
the Flood, there were a lot of doubts about the extent of global
warming. Since then however, the effects of this inconvenient truth
have increased by an alarming degree. Where it was once presumed
that the sea level would rise 37 cm by 2050, now scientists
estimate that there will be a 3-to-4-metre raise. Higher Ground
explores what the world might look like if this happens,
encouraging the reader to think about the impact of climate change.
The images were taken in Austria, Switzerland, Germany, France and
Spain. French top author Philippe Claudel wrote a new fictional
story especially for this book.
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Crépuscule
Philippe Claudel
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R762
Discovery Miles 7 620
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Dog Island (Paperback)
Philippe Claudel; Translated by Euan Cameron
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R296
R240
Discovery Miles 2 400
Save R56 (19%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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From the author of Grey Souls and Brodeck's Report: a chilling
island fable of murder, exploitation and complicity "A parable
about modern migration that is also the kind of detective story
Mikhail Bulgakov might have written: visionary and darkly
humourous" Lucy Hughes-Hallet, New Statesman BOOKS OF THE YEAR "A
timely and elegant examination of the migrant situation in the
Mediterranean from the point of view of a remote, volcanic island"
The New European BOOKS OF THE YEAR The Dog Islands are a small,
isolated cluster of islands in the Mediterranean - so called
because together, when viewed from above, they form the shape of a
dog, twisting and baring its teeth against a brilliant blue sea.
One of the only inhabited islands (the one that takes the place of
one of the dog's teeth) is dominated by a gently smoking volcano,
fringed by black volcanic beaches and under the iron rule of the
heads of community who are loath to let any outside influence
disrupt the quiet way of life on the island. Then one morning, an
old woman comes across three bodies that have washed up with the
tide: three young black men, who have apparently drowned in their
attempt to cross the sea. The initial reaction of the island
community is that this tragedy must be covered up, lest any
association with the drownings damages the island's tourism
industry . . . But the island's deliberate isolation from the
realities of the world cannot last for long, and when a visiting
detective arrives on the island and starts asking awkward
questions, it becomes clear that the deaths of these three men
indicate something far more sinister and deeply rotten lying at the
heart of this godforsaken fragment of sea-bound land. Translated
from the French by Euan Cameron EUAN CAMERON is a literary
translator from the French and a former publisher. His previous
translations include works by Patrick Modiano, Didier Decoin and
Paul Morand, as well as biographies of Marcel Proust and Irene
Nemirovsky. His debut novel, Madeleine, was published in 2019. With
the support of the Creative Europe Programme of the European Union
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Dog Island (Hardcover)
Philippe Claudel; Translated by Euan Cameron
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R503
R409
Discovery Miles 4 090
Save R94 (19%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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From the author of Grey Souls and Brodeck's Report: a chilling
island fable of murder, exploitation and complicity "A parable
about modern migration that is also the kind of detective story
Mikhail Bulgakov might have written: visionary and darkly
humourous" Lucy Hughes-Hallet, New Statesman BOOKS OF THE YEAR "A
timely and elegant examination of the migrant situation in the
Mediterranean from the point of view of a remote, volcanic island"
The New European BOOKS OF THE YEAR The Dog Islands are a small,
isolated cluster of islands in the Mediterranean - so called
because together, when viewed from above, they form the shape of a
dog, twisting and baring its teeth against a brilliant blue sea.
One of the only inhabited islands (the one that takes the place of
one of the dog's teeth) is dominated by a gently smoking volcano,
fringed by black volcanic beaches and under the iron rule of the
heads of community who are loath to let any outside influence
disrupt the quiet way of life on the island. Then one morning, an
old woman comes across three bodies that have washed up with the
tide: three young black men, who have apparently drowned in their
attempt to cross the sea. The initial reaction of the island
community is that this tragedy must be covered up, lest any
association with the drownings damages the island's tourism
industry . . . But the island's deliberate isolation from the
realities of the world cannot last for long, and when a visiting
detective arrives on the island and starts asking awkward
questions, it becomes clear that the deaths of these three men
indicate something far more sinister and deeply rotten lying at the
heart of this godforsaken fragment of sea-bound land. Translated
from the French by Euan Cameron EUAN CAMERON is a literary
translator from the French and a former publisher. His previous
translations include works by Patrick Modiano, Didier Decoin and
Paul Morand, as well as biographies of Marcel Proust and Irène
Némirovsky. His debut novel, Madeleine, was published in 2019.
With the support of the Creative Europe Programme of the European
Union
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Grey Souls (Paperback)
Philippe Claudel; Translated by Hoyt Rogers
1
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R293
R237
Discovery Miles 2 370
Save R56 (19%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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A bestseller in France and winner of the Prix Renaudot, Grey Souls
is a mesmerising and atmospheric tale of three mysterious deaths in
an oddly isolated French village during World War I. The placid
daily life of a small town near the front seems impervious to the
nearby pounding of artillery fire and the parade of wounded
strangers passing through its streets. But the illusion of calm is
soon shattered by the deaths of three innocents - the charming new
schoolmistress who captures every male heart only to kill herself;
an angelic ten-year-old girl who is found strangled; and a local
policeman's cherished wife, who dies alone in labour while her
husband is hunting the murderer. Twenty years later, the policeman
still struggles to make sense of these tragedies, a struggle that
both torments and sustains him. But excavating the town's secret
history will bring neither peace to him nor justice to the wicked.
Winner of the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize 2010 A murder
investigation in post-war France becomes an exploration of the
legacy of German occupation. From his village in post-war France,
Brodeck makes his solitary journeys into the mountains to collect
data on the natural environment. Day by day he also reconstructs
his own life, all but lost in the years he spent in a camp during
the war. No-one had expected to see him again. One day, a
flamboyant stranger rides into the village, upsetting the fragile
balance of everyday life. Soon he is named the Anderer, "the
other", and tensions rise until, one night, the newcomer is
murdered. Brodeck is instructed to write an account of the events
leading to his death, but his report delivers much more than the
bare facts: it becomes the story of a community coming to terms
with the legacy of enemy occupation. In a powerful narrative of
exceptional fascination, Brodeck's Report explores the very limits
of humanity.
From the sizzling sharpness of freshly cut garlic to the cool tang
of a father's aftershave; the heady intoxication of a fumbled first
kiss to the anodyne void of disinfectant and death, this is a
decadently original olfactory memoir. In sixty-three elusive
episodes we roam freely across the countryside of Lorraine,
North-East France, from kitchen to farm to a lover's bed.
Recognising the bittersweet nostalgia of a scent that slips away on
the summer breeze, Claudel demonstrates again his impeccable grasp
of the personal and the universal, interweaved with a rare,
self-deprecating charm. This is an evocative patchwork at once
earthy and ethereal, erotic and heart-breaking. Claudel permits us
a glimpse of moments that have driven him to delight or despair,
creating through the fading aromas of the past fragments of humour,
insight and quite intangible beauty.
Traumatized by memories of his war-ravaged country, and with his
son and daughter-in-law dead, Monsieur Linh travels to a foreign
land to bring the child in his arms to safety. The other refugees
in the detention centre are unsure how to help the old man; his
caseworkers are compassionate, but overworked. Monsieur Linh
struggles beneath the weight of his sorrow, and becomes
increasingly bewildered and isolated in this unfamiliar,
fast-moving town. And then he encounters Monsieur Bark. They do not
speak each other's language, but Monsieur Bark is sympathetic to
the foreigner's need to care for the child. Recently widowed and
equally alone, he is eager to talk, and Monsieur Linh knows how to
listen. The two men share their solitude, and find friendship in an
unlikely dialogue between two very different cultures. Monsieur
Linh and His Child is a remarkable novel with an extraordinary
twist, a subtle portrait of friendship and a dialogue between two
cultures.
The report that Brodeck is writing into the lynching of an artist,
an outsider, a flamboyant Other figure who has deeply disturbed the
fragile equilibrium of the town he briefly settled in, becomes a
report into the catastrophe of his own life. Brodeck, it seems,
himself also an outsider, has lately returned from a concentration
camp. In the course of his investigation into the death of the
artist, he uncovers the truth about his distant origins, about his
having been rounded up when the Germans came to the town, and all
that happened to his family when he was gone. This immensely
powerful chronicle of a community's fear and loathing of what is
strange, what is from the outside, has been hailed as one of the
outstanding European novels of the last decade.
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The Investigation (Paperback)
Philippe Claudel; Translated by Daniel Hahn
1
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R296
R240
Discovery Miles 2 400
Save R56 (19%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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The Investigator is despatched to a provincial town to find out the
truth behind a disturbing spate of suicides amongst employees of
The Firm. But from the moment he steps off the train, he finds
himself in a world that is alien, unrecognisable, and diabolically
complex. From the hostile weather and the fickle hospitality at
Hotel Hope to the town's bewildering inhabitants, everything seems
to be against him to the point where he wonders whether he is
trapped in a recurring nightmare, or has passed into the realm of
death itself. Cold, hungry and humiliated, and always one step
behind, he nevertheless remains determined to find the only man he
can hold to account - The Firm's legendary but elusive founder. The
Investigation is an enthralling fable in which our own world is
turned on its head, and where the only answers are more questions.
Philippe Claudel - author of Brodeck's Report and Monsieur Linh and
His Child - is one of Europe's most daring and versatile novelists.
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