Hardcover, UK First Edition, First Printing, Signed by author to the title page.
WINNER of the COSTA BOOK OF THE YEAR, 2008
WINNER of the the Costa Novel Award, 2008.
Short listed for the Man Booker Prize, 2008.
Long listed for The Man Booker Prize 2008.
Nearing her one-hundredth birthday, Roseanne McNulty faces an uncertain future, as the Roscommon Regional Mental hospital where she's spent the best part of her adult life prepares for closure. Over the weeks leading up to this upheaval, she talks often with her psychiatrist Dr Grene, and their relationship intensifies and complicates. Told through their respective journals, the story that emerges is at once shocking and deeply beautiful. Refracted through the haze of memory and retelling, Roseanne's story becomes an alternative, secret history of Ireland's changing character and the story of a life blighted by terrible mistreatment and ignorance, and yet marked still by love and passion and hope.
The Outcast - Sadie JONES
Published by UK Chatto & Windus 7 February 2008
Price£24.99
ISBN 978-0701181758
Signed by Author
First EditionFirst Printing
Hardcover, UK First Edition, First Printing, Signed, Quoted and Dated (March 29th 2008, date of Cambridge signing) by author to the title page. Book comes with a Cambridge WordFest brochure and postcard.
1957, and Lewis Aldridge is travelling back to his home in the South of England. He is straight out of jail and nineteen years old. His return will trigger the implosion not just of his family, but of a whole community. A decade earlier, his father's homecoming casts a different shape. The war is over and Gilbert has recently been demobbed. He reverts easily to suburban life - cocktails at six thirty, church on Sundays - but his wife and young son resist the stuffy routine. Lewis and his mother escape to the woods for picnics, just as they did in wartime days. Nobody is surprised that Gilbert's wife counters convention, but they are all shocked when, after one of their jaunts, Lewis comes back without her. Not far away, Kit Carmichael keeps watch. She has always understood more than most, not least from what she has been dealt by her own father's hand. Lewis' grief and burgeoning rage are all too plain, and Kit makes a private vow to help. But in her attempts to set them both free, she fails to predict the painful and horrifying secrets that must first be forced into the open.
WINNER of the Costa First Novel Award, 2008.
Longlisted for the Guardian First Book Award, 2008.
Shortlisted for the Orange Broadband Prize for Fiction 2008
Longlisted for the Orange Broadband Prize for Fiction 2008
The Behaviour of Moths - Poppy ADAMS
Published by UK Virago 1 May 2008
Price£19.99
ISBN 9781844084869
Signed by Author
First EditionFirst Printing
Hardcover, UK First Edition, First Printing, Signed, Lined and Dated by author to the title page. Book comes with a Signed flyer from the London signing event.
From her lookout on the first floor, Ginny watches and waits for her adored younger sister to return to the crumbling mansion that was once their idyllic childhood home. Vivien has not stepped foot in the house since she left, forty-seven years ago; Ginny, the reclusive lepidopterist, has rarely ventured outside it. The remembrance of their youth, of loss, and of old rivalries plays across Ginny's mind. Why is Vivi coming home? Ginny has been selling off the family furniture over the years, gradually shutting off each wing of the house and retreating into the precise routines and isolation that define her days. Only the attic remains untouched. There, collected over several generations, are walls lined with pinned and preserved Bordered Beauties and Rusty Waves, Feathered Footmen and Great Brocades, Purple Cloud, Angle Shades, the Gothic and the Stranger...
Short listed for the Costa First Novel Award, 2008.
Just Henry - Michelle MAGORIAN
Published by UK Egmont 5 April 2008
Price£45.00
ISBN 9781405227568
Signed by Author
First EditionFirst PrintingLimited Edition
Hardcover, UK Signed Limited Edition of 1040 issued, this being number 195/1040. Signed and numbered to the half title page. Book comes with a promotional bookmark.
WINNER of the Costa Children's Award, 2008.
From the award-winning author of "Goodnight Mister Tom" comes "Just Henry": A gripping mystery-thriller and an insightful snapshot of time, set in post-war Britain. It's 1949 and life is bleak for Henry. He misses his father who died a war hero, and he escapes from his annoying stepfather and stepsister whenever he can and goes to the cinema - his passion. One day in the cinema queue he meets Mrs Beaumont who also loves films, and lends Henry a camera for his school project. Henry is disgusted that he's been put in a group with Jeffries, the son of a man who went AWOL, and Pip, who was born illegitimate; but he's about to learn that tolerance and friendship are more important than social stigmas. Henry will need his new friends when he processes the film and makes an alarming discovery. Like a bomb waiting to explode, Henry's world is about to unravel...
Child 44 ++ Signed & Lined ++ - Tom Rob SMITH
Published by UK Simon & Schuster 3 March 2008
Price£39.99
ISBN 978-1847371263
Signed by Author
First EditionFirst Printing
Hardcover, UK First Edition, First Printing, Signed & First Line Quoted by author to the title page..
Quote is: "Since Maria had decided to die her cat would have to defend for itself"
Short listed for the Costa First Novel Award, 2008.
Long listed for the Man Booker Prize 2008.
MGB officer Leo is a man who never questions the Party Line. He arrests whomever he is told to arrest. He dismisses the horrific death of a young boy because he is told to, because he believes the Party stance that there can be no murder in Communist Russia. Leo is the perfect soldier of the regime. But suddenly his confidence that everything he does serves a great good is shaken. He is forced to watch a man he knows to be innocent be brutally tortured. And then he is told to arrest his own wife. Leo understands how the State works: Trust and check, but check particularly on those we trust. He faces a stark choice: his wife or his life. And still the killings of children continue...
Scott Turow "CHILD 44 is a remarkable debut novel - inventive, edgy and relentlessly gripping from the first page to the last."
Robert Towne "Child 44 contrasts the bleakness of Stalinist Russia with a love story that unexpectedly and ironically blooms only because the lovers are nearly crushed by a relentless totalitarian regime hell bent on their destruction. As the two attempt to solve a series of brutal child murders the government is determined not to acknowledge, they must avoid being killed themselves in a simultaneous flight and pursuit across the wintry Russian landscape. Achingly suspenseful, full of feeling and of the twists and turns that one expects from Le Carre at his best, it's a tale that grabs you by the throat and simply never lets you go."
A Partisan's Daughter - Louis De BERNIERES
Published by UK Harvill Secker 6 March 2008
Price£19.99
ISBN 9781846551413
Signed by Author
First EditionFirst Printing
Hardcover, UK First Edition, First Printing, Signed and Lined by author to the title page. Book comes with a Cambridge WordFest brochure and postcard.
Short listed for the Costa Novel Award, 2008.
The new novel from the acclaimed author of "Birds Without Wings" and Captain Corelli's "Mandolin" is a love story at once raw and sweetly funny, wry and heartbreakingly sad. Chris is bored, lonely, trapped in a loveless, sexless marriage. In his forties, he's a stranger to the 1970s youth culture of London, a stranger to himself on the night he invites a hooker into his car. Roza is Yugoslavian, recently moved to London, the daughter of one of Tito's partisans. She's in her twenties, but has already lived a life filled with danger, misadventure, romance, and tragedy. And though she's not a hooker, when she's propositioned by Chris, she gets into his car anyway.Over the next few months Roza tells Chris the stories of her past. She's a fast-talking Scheherazade, saving her own life by telling it to Chris. And he takes in her tales as if they were oxygen in an otherwise airless world. But is Roza telling the truth? Does Chris hear the stories through the filter of his own need? Does it even matter?