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Julia Garnet is a teacher. Just retired, she is left a legacy which she uses by leaving her orderly life and going to live ? in winter ? in an apartment in Venice. Its beauty, its secret corners and treasures, and its people overwhelm a lifetime of reserve and caution. Above all, she?s touched by the all-prevalent spirit of the Angel, Raphael.
The ancient tale of Tobias, who travels to Media unaware he is accompanied by the Archangel Raphael, unfolds alongside Julia Garnet?s contemporary journey.
The two stories interweave with parents and landladies, restorers and priests, American tourists and ancient travellers abounding.
The result is an enormously satisfying journey of the spirit ? and Julia Garnet is a character to treasure.
The new novel from Salley Vickers, Sunday Times bestselling author
of The Librarian and Grandmothers Artist, Hassie Days, and her
sister, Margot, buy a run down Jacobean house in Hope Wenlock on
the Welsh Marches. While Margot continues her London life in high
finance, Hassie is left alone to work the large, long-neglected
garden. She is befriended by eccentric, sharp-tongued, Miss Foot,
who recommends, Murat, an Albanian migrant, made to feel out of
place among the locals, to help Hassie in the garden. As she works
the garden in Murat's peaceful company, Hassie ruminates on her
past life: the sibling rivalry that tainted her childhood and the
love affair that left her with painful, unanswered questions. But
as she begins to explore the history of the house and the
mysterious nearby wood, old hurts begin to fade as she experiences
the healing power of nature and discovers other worlds. In her
haunting new novel, Salley Vickers, the bestselling author of The
Librarian and The Cleaner of Chartres, writes with the profound
psychological insight and sense of the numinous power of place that
is the hallmark of all her novels. 'Salley Vickers sees with a
clear eye and writes with a light hand. She's a presence worth
cherishing' Philip Pullman 'The Gardener is a novel of regrowth
& regeneration, of sisters overcoming a toxic parental legacy
& of the healing power of seed packets' Patrick Gale 'Steeped
in a sense of the redemptive power of place, Sally Vickers's 11th
novel is a paean to green-fingered regeneration that is both
rigorous and charming' Observer 'Profoundly moving, healing and
wise, this is the perfect antidote to our urban anxiety' Joanne
Harris, author of Chocolat
A wonderful collection of stories from the much-loved Salley
Vickers. The stories in this long-awaited collection by Salley
Vickers all deal with psychological aspects of love: love given and
withheld, love craved and lost, love met and disappointed; the
differing shades of loves between friends, between parents and
children, between children and other adults; love even, in one
case, for a pet. Psychologically acute, sharply written in lucid
and often witty prose, these stories, set in Venice, Greece and
Rome as well as London and the English countryside, take us into
the complex geography of the human heart. Sometimes joyous and
humorous, sometimes melancholy and poignant, this collection
confirms Salley Vickers' reputation as one of our most subtle and
engaging writers.
The brilliant new work from the bestselling author of 'Miss
Garnet's Angel' and 'The Other Side of You'. Violet Hetherington
has taken the rash step of joining a transatlantic cruise ship to
New York to visit Edwin, an old friend. As she makes the six day
crossing, she relives the traumatic events that led to her losing
Edwin's friendship, and abandoning her career as a poet, for the
safety of marriage and domesticity. Despite her natural reserve,
she meets a rich variety of passengers travelling with her, who
affect her understanding of her own past. Most significantly, she
meets Dino, the dance host, whose motives in befriending Vi are
shady, but who teaches her to ballroom dance - and inadvertently
helps her to recover from her past. Moving between the late sixties
and the present day, 'Dancing Backwards' is written with the
lightness of touch and psychological insight which characterise
Salley Vickers' acclaimed work. This bittersweet novel is subtle,
poignant and wonderfully entertaining.
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The Enchanted April (Paperback)
Elizabeth Von Arnim; Introduction by Salley Vickers
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R268
R223
Discovery Miles 2 230
Save R45 (17%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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'This delicious confection will work its magic on all' Daily
Telegraph The discreet advertisement in The Times, addressed 'To
Those who Appreciate Wistaria and Sunshine', offers a small
medieval castle for rent, above a bay on the Italian Riviera. Four
very different women - the dishevelled and downtrodden Mrs Wilkins,
the sad, sweet-faced Mrs Arbuthnot, the formidable widow Mrs Fisher
and the ravishing socialite Lady Caroline Dester - are drawn to the
shores of the Mediterranean that April. As each, in turn, blossoms
in the warmth of the Italian spring and finds their spirits
stirring, quite unexpected changes occur. The Enchanted April,
published in 1922, is a witty and delightful depiction of what it
is like to rediscover joy. 'Brims with magic and laughter' Amanda
Craig, Guardian Includes a new introduction by Salley Vickers,
author of Miss Garnet's Angel
*A Sunday Times Top 10 Bestseller* 'Vickers sees with a clear eye
and writes with a light hand; she's a presence worth cherishing in
the ranks of modern novelists.' Philip Pullman In 1958, Sylvia
Blackwell, fresh from one of the new post-war Library Schools,
takes up a job as children's librarian in a run down library in the
market town of East Mole. Her mission is to fire the enthusiasm of
the children of East Mole for reading. But her love affair with the
local married GP, and her befriending of his precious daughter, her
neighbour's son and her landlady's neglected grandchild, ignite the
prejudices of the town, threatening her job and the very existence
of the library with dramatic consequences for them all. The
Librarian is a moving testament to the joy of reading and the power
of books to change and inspire us all. 'Underneath the delightful
patina of nostalgia for post-War England, there are stern and spiky
questions about why we are allowing our children to be robbed of
their heritage of story.' Frank Cottrell Boyce 'Vickers has a
formidable knack for laying open the human heart' Sunday Times
The new novel from Salley Vickers, Sunday Times bestselling author
of The Librarian, available for pre-order now Grandmothers is the
story of three very different women and their relationship with the
younger generation: fiercely independent Nan, who leads a secret
life as an award-winning poet when she is not teaching her grandson
Billy how to lie; glamorous Blanche, deprived of the company of her
beloved granddaughter Kitty by her hostile daughter-in-law, who
finds solace in rebelliously taking to drink and shop lifting; and
shy, bookish Minna who in the safety of shepherd's hut shares with
her surrogate granddaughter Rose her passion for reading. The
outlook of all three women subtly alters when through their
encounters with each other they discover that the past is always
with us and that we go on learning and changing until the very end.
Grandmothers is a beautifully observed, sometimes subversive, often
tender and elegiac novel from the Sunday Times bestselling author
of The Librarian. 'Vickers sees with a clear eye and writes with a
light hand. She's a presence worth cherishing in the ranks of
modern novelists.' Philip Pullman 'Vickers has a formidable knack
for laying open the human heart' Sunday Times
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The Enchanted April (Hardcover)
Elizabeth Von Arnim; Introduction by Salley Vickers
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R306
R257
Discovery Miles 2 570
Save R49 (16%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Introducing Little Clothbound Classics: irresistible, mini editions
of short stories, novellas and essays from the world's greatest
writers, designed by the award-winning Coralie Bickford-Smith.
Celebrating the range and diversity of Penguin Classics, they take
us from snowy Japan to springtime Vienna, from haunted New England
to a sun-drenched Mediterranean island, and from a game of chess on
the ocean to a love story on the moon. Beautifully designed and
printed, these collectible editions are bound in colourful, tactile
cloth and stamped with foil. The Enchanted April, Elizabeth von
Arnim's brilliant, irrepressible novella, tells the tale of four
very different women who, on answering an advertisement in The
Times, find themselves far away from the drizzle of London and
instead in the warmth of an Italian sun. There, alongside the
lapping of the Mediterranean, the women's spirits begin to shift,
and quite unexpected changes take place.
The brilliant new novel from the bestselling author of 'Mr
Golightly's Holiday' and 'Miss Garnet's Angel'. 'There is no cure
for being alive.' Thus speaks Dr David McBride, a psychiatrist for
whom death exerts an unusual draw. As a young child he witnessed
the death of his six-year-old brother and it is this traumatic
event which has shaped his own personality and choice of
profession. One day a failed suicide, Elizabeth Cruikshank, is
admitted to his hospital. She is unusually reticent and it is not
until he recalls a painting by Caravaggio that she finally yields
up her story. We learn of Elizabeth Cruikshank's dereliction of
trust, and the man she has lost, through David's narration. As her
story unfolds, David finds his own life being touched by a sense
that the 'other side' of his elusive patient has a strange
resonance for him, too. Set partly in Rome, 'The Other Side of You'
explores the theme of redemption through love and art, which has
become a hallmark of Salley Vickers's acclaimed work, which
includes 'Mr Golightly's Holiday' and 'Miss Garnet's Angel'.
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Less Than Angels (Paperback)
Barbara Pym; Introduction by Salley Vickers
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R301
R251
Discovery Miles 2 510
Save R50 (17%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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INTRODUCED BY SALLEY VICKERS 'I'm a huge fan of Barbara Pym'
RICHARD OSMAN 'She is the rarest of treasures; she reminds us of
the heart-breaking silliness of everyday life' ANNE TYLER Catherine
Oliphant is a writer and lives with handsome anthropologist Tom
Mallow. Their relationship runs into trouble when he begins a
romance with student Deirdre Swann, so Catherine turns her
attention to the reclusive anthropologist Alaric Lydgate, who has a
fondness for wearing African masks. Added to this love tangle are
the activities of Deirdre's fellow students and their attempts to
win the competition for a research grant. The course of true love
or academia never did run smooth. 'Her best [novels] are sheer
delight, and all of them companionable. Quiet, paradoxical, funny
and sad, they have the iron in them of permanence too' JOHN UPDIKE,
NEW YORKER 'She can be seriously, hilariously funny - no other
novelist has celebrated our national silliness with such
exuberance' KATE SAUNDERS
The new novel from Salley Vickers, Sunday Times bestselling author
of The Librarian and Grandmothers - a charming, heartwarming and
beautifully designed Christmas gift! Artist, Hassie Days, and her
sister, Margot, buy a run down Jacobean house in Hope Wenlock on
the Welsh Marches. While Margot continues her London life in high
finance, Hassie is left alone to work the large, long-neglected
garden. She is befriended by eccentric, sharp-tongued, Miss Foot,
who recommends, Murat, an Albanian migrant, made to feel out of
place among the locals, to help Hassie in the garden. As she works
the garden in Murat's peaceful company, Hassie ruminates on her
past life: the sibling rivalry that tainted her childhood and the
love affair that left her with painful, unanswered questions. But
as she begins to explore the history of the house and the
mysterious nearby wood, old hurts begin to fade as she experiences
the healing power of nature and discovers other worlds. In her
haunting new novel, Salley Vickers, the bestselling author of The
Librarian and The Cleaner of Chartres, writes with the profound
psychological insight and sense of the numinous power of place that
is the hallmark of all her novels. 'Salley Vickers sees with a
clear eye and writes with a light hand. She's a presence worth
cherishing' Philip Pullman 'The Gardener is a novel of regrowth
& regeneration, of sisters overcoming a toxic parental legacy
& of the healing power of seed packets. The perfect fictional
promise to draw us through a harsh winter' Patrick Gale 'Steeped in
a sense of the redemptive power of place, Sally Vickers's 11th
novel is a paean to green-fingered regeneration that is both
rigorous and charming' Observer
It is 1938 and Sigmund Freud, suffering from the debilitating
effects of cancer, has been permitted by the Nazis to leave Vienna.
He seeks refuge in England, taking up residence in the house in
Hampstead in which he will die only fifteen months later. But his
last months are made vivid by the arrival of a stranger, who comes
and goes according to Freud's state of health. Who is the
mysterious visitor and why has he come to tell the famed proponent
of the Oedipus complex his strange story? Set partly in pre-war
London and partly in ancient Greece, Where Three Roads Meet is as
brilliantly compelling as it is moving. Former psychoanalyst and
acclaimed novelist Salley Vickers revisits a crime committed long
ago which still has disturbing reverberations for us all.
A beautiful, beguiling novel from the bestselling author of The
Librarian and Grandmothers 'A lovely book . . . wise at heart and
filled with colourful characters' Joanne Harris, author of Chocolat
A compelling story of darkness and light, of traumatic loss and
second chances, The Cleaner of Chartres tells of the mysterious and
elusive Agnes Morel whose little acts of kindness around a rural
French cathedral touch the lives of others with consequences both
good and ill. But when her tragic past is exposed, Agnes must face
up to the truth of her origins. 'Salley Vickers sees with a clear
eye and writes with a light hand and she knows how the world works.
She's a presence worth cherishing' Philip Pullman 'A rich weave of
loss and redemption . . . magic and mystery' Observer, Book of the
Year
The new novel from Salley Vickers, Sunday Times bestselling author
of The Librarian 'Heart-warming... Grandmothers is a beautifully
written and moving celebration of this love, too often unsung, that
reaches out across the generations' The Times Grandmothers is the
story of three very different women and their relationship with the
younger generation: fiercely independent Nan, who leads a secret
life as an award-winning poet when she is not teaching her grandson
Billy how to lie; glamorous Blanche, deprived of the company of her
beloved granddaughter Kitty by her hostile daughter-in-law, who
finds solace in rebelliously taking to drink and shop lifting; and
shy, bookish Minna who in the safety of shepherd's hut shares with
her surrogate granddaughter Rose her passion for reading. The
outlook of all three women subtly alters when through their
encounters with each other they discover that the past is always
with us and that we go on learning and changing until the very end.
Grandmothers is a beautifully observed, sometimes subversive, often
tender and elegiac novel from the Sunday Times bestselling author
of The Librarian. 'A fond portrait of what it is to love a child,
both yours and not... a tonic for the overlooked modern
grandmother' Sunday Times 'Vickers sees with a clear eye and writes
with a light hand. She's a presence worth cherishing in the ranks
of modern novelists' Philip Pullman
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Cousins (Paperback)
Salley Vickers
1
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R210
R166
Discovery Miles 1 660
Save R44 (21%)
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Ships in 5 - 7 working days
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From the bestselling author of THE LIBRARIAN How much can love ask
of us? Brilliant and mercurial Will Tye suffers a life changing
accident. The terrible event ripples through three generations of
the complex and eccentric Tye family, bringing to light old
tragedies and dangerous secrets. Each member of the family holds
some clue to the chain of events which may have led to the accident
and each holds themselves to blame. Most closely affected is Will's
cousin Cecelia, whose affinity with Will leaves her most vulnerable
to his suffering and whose own life is for ever changed by how she
will respond to it. Told through the eyes of three women close to
Will, his sister, his grandmother and his aunt, Cousins is a novel
weaving darkness and light which takes us from the outbreak of
World War Two to the present day, exploring the recurrence of
tragedy, the nature of trangression, and the limits of morality and
love. 'A wonderful book. Salley Vickers spins a spellbinding
account of a family in distress' Elizabeth Strout
Many years ago, Mr. Golightly wrote a work of dramatic fiction that
grew to be an astonishing international bestseller. But his
reputation is on the decline and he finds himself badly out of
touch with the modern world. He decides to take a holiday and comes
to the historic village of Great Calne, hoping to use the
opportunity to bring his great work up to date. But he soon finds
that events take over his plans and that the themes he has written
on are being strangely replicated in the lives of the villagers
around him. As he comes to know his neighbors better, Mr. Golightly
begins to examine his attitude toward love and to ponder the
terrible catastrophe of his only son's death -- so, too, we begin
to learn the true and extraordinary identity of Mr.
Golightly.
Following the death of Peter Hansome, his wife Bridget is contacted by Frances Slater, her late-husband’s mistress. Though the two are from opposite sides of London and meet under the least desirable circumstances, the women become close friends. In a subtly wrought turn of events, Bridget and Frances discover that they have in common what is important to them most: their parallel memories of Peter, killed in a car accident, and the shared reality of his spirit form, haunting them still. A gracefully tuned feat of the imagination, Salley Vickers’s novel is a rare celebration of life’s most intriguing geometries, the love triangle.
"If you enjoy the work of Marilynne Robinson, Penelope Fitzgerald,
James Salter...you should be reading Vickers." --Michael Dirda,
"The Washington Post Book World"
There is something very special about Agnes Morel. A quiet
presence in the small French town of Chartres, she can usually be
found cleaning the famed medieval cathedral or doing odd jobs for
the townspeople. No one knows where she came from or why. Not
diffident Abbe Paul, nor lonely Professor Jones, nor even Alain
Fleury, whose attention she catches with her tawny eyes. She has
transformed all their lives in her own subtle way, yet no one
suspects the dark secret Agnes is hiding.
Then an accidental encounter dredges up the specter of her past,
and the nasty meddling of town gossips forces Agnes to confront her
tragic history and the violent act that haunts it.
After the death of her longtime friend and flatmate, retired
British history teacher Julia Garnet does something completely out
of character: She takes a six-month rental on a modest apartment in
Venice. She befriends a young Italian boy and English twins who are
restoring a fourteenth-century chapel. And she falls in love for
the first time in her life with an art dealer named Carlo.
Juxtaposing Julia's journey of self-discovery with the apocryphal
tale of Tobias and the Archangel Raphael, "Miss Garnet's Angel"
tells a lyrical, incandescent story of love, loss, miracles, and
redemption and of one woman's transformation and epiphany.
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