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Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
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Not Sorry (Paperback)
Sarah Salway
bundle available
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R324
R263
Discovery Miles 2 630
Save R61 (19%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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One of the great hidden gems of the past decade. Written in brief
entries from 'Ambition' to 'Zzzzz' Salway's confident debut novel
chronicles the existential ups and downs of British 20-something
Verity Bell. The alphabetically arranged mini-chapters make for an
inventive and episodic narrative, as Verity muses on her career (A
is for Attitude: "I work as a secretary in the media... something I
don't always talk about because some people seem to think I'm
showing off"), her friendship with the fabulous Sally (B is for
Best Friends: "my best friend, Sally, has become the mistress of a
millionaire called Colin"), her feelings on Gwyneth Paltrow (G is
for You-Know-Who: "If I looked like Gwyneth Paltrow, nothing could
possibly go wrong in my life") and other issues of love, friendship
and family. With both parents deceased, Verity clings to Sally as a
sort of substitute family, but struggles with her insecurities and
her envy of Sally's 'perfect' existence. She falls madly in love
with a married man but, unsurprisingly, their steamy affair is not
the solution to Verity's problems; rather, it exacerbates her
self-doubt as she plays second fiddle to the wife and children.
Ultimately, Verity's life takes an unexpected turn, and she emerges
a stronger and more creative woman. Salway wraps her bright, comic
writing in bite-sized chunks that make this first novel an
easy-reading pleasure. First published in 2004 to considerable
critical acclaim - Neil Gaiman called Sarah 'an astonishingly smart
writer' and Sainsbury's magazine hailed the book as 'a Bridget
Jones for our times' - Something Beginning With became a cult
classic. By which we mean a book that didn't sell a huge amount but
nearly everyone who did buy it loved it. We are delighted to be
able to include Something Beginning With as one of the launch
titles for The Library of Lost Books. Sarah has a considerable
online following and her debut novel has been unavailable for some
time.
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The Cool EP (Paperback)
Patrick Chapman, Sarah Salway, Sally Spedding
bundle available
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R79
Discovery Miles 790
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The 'Mono' EPs are set to redefine the way people read short
stories. Produced using a classic design, the EPs, offer a
pocketsize companion that can be taken and read anywhere - and
there is no need for batteries. This EP features stories.
Secrets and their consequences run deep through Sarah Salway's
short stories in this haunting and sharply written collection. A
bored housewife welcomes the nomadic painter of family pets into
her home and commissions a portrait of her fridge; a schoolboy
learns how to survive when his gang turns against him; a man's life
is turned around when he hears his wife make a new noise in bed,
and in the title story, a dance between husband and wife at a
school ceilidh turns into a battle for survival. This is domestic
life turned on its head, with Salway's witty and economic prose
capturing the private moments of transformation by some very
different characters on the edge.
Discover a novelist that Neil Gaiman describes as 'an astonishingly
smart writer'. When a chance meeting with a stranger leads to an
offer of a room in exchange for telling her stories, Molly jumps at
the chance. Slowly she builds a new, eccentric family around
herself: Tim, her secretive boyfriend, who just might be a spy;
Miranda, the lovelorn hairstylist; Liz, the lusty librarian; Mr.
Roberts, landlord and listener; and his French wife, Mrs. Roberts.
Much to Molly's surprise, she finds the stories she tells now are
her key to creating a completely different life. Suddenly, her
future is full of endless possibilities. The trouble is, Molly's
not the only one telling tales. And the truth is always stranger
than fiction. Sarah Salway's witty, finely-tuned and poignant story
of many stories is a uniquely entrancing chronicle.
Chronic ill-health is now recognised as a major public health and
social welfare issue, with significant new policy initiatives in
recent months. This report presents findings from a detailed new
investigation into the experiences of individuals living with
long-term ill-health and their families. New in-depth qualitative
material is combined with secondary analyses of national datasets
to examine the ways in which long-term ill-health impacts upon
different dimensions of poverty. The report explores the links
between long-term ill-health and three inter-related areas:
employment, welfare benefits and social participation and social
support. It covers an ethnically diverse sample in order to
explore, though not assume, the relevance of ethnicity for the
experience and consequences of long-term ill-health and identifies
ways in which current UK health and social policy might better
serve the needs of people with long-term health conditions. This
accessible report is of importance to policy-makers and
practitioners working across the public health and social welfare
arenas. The findings are of relevance to a wide range of programme
areas including: access to employment, welfare benefits, chronic
illness self-management (Expert Patients Programmes) and ethnic
minority disadvantage. Researchers and students will also find the
report of interest.
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