books tagged “novels”

books tagged “novels”


Find signed collectible books by ''

English

  • Wallace, Lew: Ben Hur: A Tale of the Christ
  • Bluest Eye
    by Toni Morrison
    ISBN 0030850746 (0-03-085074-6)
    Hardcover, Henry Holt & Co

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Bluest Eye'
    Book summary:

    Oprah Book Club® Selection, April 2000: Originally published in 1970, The Bluest Eye is Toni Morrison's first novel. In an afterword written more than two decades later, the author expressed her dissatisfaction with the book's language and structure: "It required a sophistication unavailable to me." Perhaps we can chalk up this verdict to modesty, or to the Nobel laureate's impossibly high standards of quality control. In any case, her debut is nothing if not sophisticated, in terms of both narrative ingenuity and rhetorical sweep. It also shows the young author drawing a bead on the subjects that would dominate much of her career: racial hatred, historical memory, and the dazzling or degrading power of language itself.

    Set in Lorain, Ohio, in 1941, The Bluest Eye is something of an ensemble piece. The point of view is passed like a baton from one character to the next, with Morrison's own voice functioning as a kind of gold standard throughout. The focus, though, is on an 11-year-old black girl named Pecola Breedlove, whose entire family has been given a cosmetic cross to bear:

    You looked at them and wondered why they were so ugly; you looked closely and could not find the source. Then you realized that it came from conviction, their conviction. It was as though some mysterious all-knowing master had given each one a cloak of ugliness to wear, and they had each accepted it without question.... And they took the ugliness in their hands, threw it as a mantle over them, and went about the world with it.
    There are far uglier things in the world than, well, ugliness, and poor Pecola is subjected to most of them. She's spat upon, ridiculed, and ultimately raped and impregnated by her own father. No wonder she yearns to be the very opposite of what she is--yearns, in other words, to be a white child, possessed of the blondest hair and the bluest eye.

    This vein of self-hatred is exactly what keeps Morrison's novel from devolving into a cut-and-dried scenario of victimization. She may in fact pin too much of the blame on the beauty myth: "Along with the idea of romantic love, she was introduced to another--physical beauty. Probably the most destructive ideas in the history of human thought. Both originated in envy, thrived in insecurity, and ended in disillusion." Yet the destructive power of these ideas is essentially colorblind, which gives The Bluest Eye the sort of universal reach that Morrison's imitators can only dream of. And that, combined with the novel's modulated pathos and musical, fine-grained language, makes for not merely a sophisticated debut but a permanent one. --James Marcus [via]

  • The Castle of Otranto
    by Horace Walpole
    ISBN 0030119502 (0-03-011950-2)
    Softcover, Harcourt College Pub

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Castle of Otranto'
  • Walpole, Horace: The Castle of Otranto: A Gothic Story
    The Castle of Otranto: A Gothic Story
    by Horace Walpole, W. Scott, M. Mudrick
    ISBN 0020552009 (0-02-055200-9)
    Hardcover, Simon & Schuster

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Castle of Otranto: A Gothic Story'
  • The Complete C.S. Lewis Signature Classics
    by C. S. Lewis
    ISBN 0060506083 (0-06-050608-3)
    Hardcover, Harper San Francisco

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Complete C.S. Lewis Signature Classics'
    Book summary:

    For the first time ever, these seven essential volumes by C. S. Lewis are available in a single edition. This remarkable book presents the classic works Mere Christianity, The Screwtape Letters, The Great Divorce, The Problem of Pain, Miracles, A Grief Observed, and Lewis's prophetic examination of universal values, The Abolition of Man. Beautiful and timeless, this is a vital collection by one of the greatest literary figures of the twentieth century. Lewis reached a vast audience during his lifetime, and books such as Mere Christianity and The Screwtape Letters continue to be regarded as among the best spiritual writing of all time. With his uncanny grasp of human nature, Lewis offers a refreshing antidote to the modern world's consumerism and moral relativism. This new edition of his most celebrated books highlights Lewis's compassion for humanity and his relevance for the twenty-first century. [via]

  • Coraline
    by Neil Gaiman, Dave McKean
    ISBN 0060575913 (0-06-057591-3)
    Softcover, Harpercollins Childrens Books

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Coraline'
    Book summary:

    Coraline lives with her preoccupied parents in part of a huge old house--a house so huge that other people live in it, too... round, old former actresses Miss Spink and Miss Forcible and their aging Highland terriers ("We trod the boards, luvvy") and the mustachioed old man under the roof ("'The reason you cannot see the mouse circus,' said the man upstairs, 'is that the mice are not yet ready and rehearsed.'") Coraline contents herself for weeks with exploring the vast garden and grounds. But with a little rain she becomes bored--so bored that she begins to count everything blue (153), the windows (21), and the doors (14). And it is the 14th door that--sometimes blocked with a wall of bricks--opens up for Coraline into an entirely alternate universe. Now, if you're thinking fondly of The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe or Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, you're on the wrong track. Neil Gaiman's Coraline is far darker, far stranger, playing on our deepest fears. And, like Roald Dahl's work, it is delicious.

    What's on the other side of the door? A distorted-mirror world, containing presumably everything Coraline has ever dreamed of... people who pronounce her name correctly (not "Caroline"), delicious meals (not like her father's overblown "recipes"), an unusually pink and green bedroom (not like her dull one), and plenty of horrible (very un-boring) marvels, like a man made out of live rats. The creepiest part, however, is her mirrored parents, her "other mother" and her "other father"--people who look just like her own parents, but with big, shiny, black button eyes, paper-white skin... and a keen desire to keep her on their side of the door. To make creepy creepier, Coraline has been illustrated masterfully in scritchy, terrifying ink drawings by British mixed-media artist and Sandman cover illustrator Dave McKean. This delightful, funny, haunting, scary as heck, fairy-tale novel is about as fine as they come. Highly recommended. (Ages 11 and older) --Karin Snelson [via]

  • Darkness at Noon
    by Arthur Koestler
    ISBN 0025652109 (0-02-565210-9)
    Hardcover, Simon & Schuster, Incorporated

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Darkness at Noon'
  • Mulisch, Harry: De Aanslag
    De Aanslag
    by Harry Mulisch
    ISBN 9023408012 (90-234-0801-2)
    Softcover, Bezige Bij

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'De Aanslag'
  • Desesperacion
    by Stephen King
    ISBN 9875660620 (987-566-062-0)
    Softcover, Debolsillo

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Desesperacion'
  • The Dispossessed
    by Ursula K. Le Guin
    ISBN 006051275X (0-06-051275-X)
    Softcover, Perennial

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Dispossessed'
    Book summary:

    The ideas of Shevek, a brilliant physicist from the anarchist world of Anarres are being stifled by jealous colleagues. So he goes to the hell-planet Urras, seeking a different kind of freedom - and finds himself embroiled in deadly intrigue and bloody revoulution. [via]

  • Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood
    by Rebecca Wells
    ISBN 0060502258 (0-06-050225-8)
    Softcover, HarperCollins Publishers

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood'
    Book summary:

    a big, blowzy romp through the rainbow eccentricities of three generations of crazy bayou debutantes."-atlanta journal-constitution"a very entertaining and, ultimately, deeply moving novel about the complex bonds between mother and daughter."-washington post"mary mccarthy, anne rivers siddons, and a host of others have portrayed the power and value of female friendships, but no one has done it with more grace, charm, talent, and power than rebecca wells."-richmond times-dispatchthe incomparable #1 new york times bestseller-a book that reigned at the top of the list for an remarkable sixty-eight weeks-rebecca wells's divine secrets of the ya-ya sisterhood is a classic of southern women's fiction to be read and reread over and over again. A poignant, funny, outrageous, and wise novel about a lifetime friendship between four southern women, divine secrets of the ya-ya sisterhood brilliantly explores the bonds of female friendship, the often-rocky relationship between mothers and daughters, and the healing power of humor and love, in a story as fresh and uplifting as when it was first published a decade and a half ago. If you haven't yet met the ya-yas, what are you waiting for [via]

  • Hsueh-Chim, Tsao: Dream of Red Mansions
    Dream of Red Mansions
    by Tsao Hsueh-Chim
    ISBN 004820028X (0-04-820028-X)
    Softcover, Harpercollins

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Dream of Red Mansions'
  • El Club Dumas
    by Perez Reverte
    ISBN 9681903862 (968-19-0386-2)
    Softcover, Santillana USA Pub Co Inc

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'El Club Dumas'
    Book summary:

    Lucas Corso is a bibliophilic mercenary in the middle to two searches. He needs to prove if a manuscript of The Three Musketeers is genuine. He must also find the solution to the enigma of a diabolic book, burned with the printer in 1667, and of which only two other copies are known. The mystery leads him from the Holy Office to books condemned by the Vatican; from dusty old bookstores to the most select libraries owned by important international collectors.

    Description in Spanish: Descifrar el misterio de un libro que invoca al demonio, del que sólo quedan tres ejemplares en el mundo, se convirtió para Lucas Corso, comprador de libros antiguos por encargo, en peligrosa aventura. Pero por si esto fuera poco, un capítulo manuscrito de los tres mosqueteros de Alejandro Dumas entra en escena y se entremezclan historias para dar origen a un apasionante thriller al mejor estilo de Arturo Pérez-Reverte. "El club Dumas" (1993), una de las novelas más emblemáticas del autor, constituye un modelo ejemplar de utilización de los más genuinos ingredientes de la novela de intriga, de investigación criminal, ambientación histórica y ficción culturalista, además de ser un homenaje al maestro del folletín decimonónico, Alejandro Dumas. Esta novela ha sido llevada a la gran pantalla por Roman Polanski con el título "La novena puerta". [via]

  • El General En Su Laberinto
    by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    ISBN 9500705516 (950-07-0551-6)
    Softcover, Random House Mondadori

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'El General En Su Laberinto'
    Book summary:

    El general Simón Bolívar, El Libertador de los países de América del Sur, da, por última vez, un nostálgico viaje por el río Magdalena en el que vuelve a visitar ciudades en sus orillas donde revive sus triumfos, sus pasiones y las traiciones de toda una vida. Poseedor de un gran encanto personal, prodigiosamente afortunado en amores, en la guerra y en la política, todavía baila con tanto entusiasmo y habilidad que los que lo ven no pueden creer lo enfermo que está. Apasionado por los recuerdos del poder que tuvo, y de su sueño de unidad continental que nunca logró realizar, Bolívar es un ejemplo conmovedor de cuánto puede ganarse y perderse en una vida. [via]

  • Garcia Marquez, Gabriel: El General En Su Laberinto / The General In His Labyrinth
  • Snicket, Lemony: El Ventanal
    El Ventanal
    by Lemony Snicket
    ISBN 9685958327 (968-5958-32-7)
    Softcover, Random House Mondadori

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'El Ventanal'
  • Eragon
    by Christopher Paolini, Silvia Komet, Enrique De Heriz
    ISBN 8496284441 (84-96284-44-1)
    Softcover, Roca Editorial

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Eragon'
    Book summary:

    Eragon es el primer titulo de la trilogia de El Legado, que tiene como protagonistas a este valiente joven y a su indomable dragona Saphira. En el reino legendario de Alagaesia la guerra se esta gestando. Los Jinetes protectores de la paz del Imperio y los unicos capaces de controlar a los inteligentes dragones, se han extinguido o han pasado a formar parte de las tropas del malvado rey Galbatorix. Los elfos hace tiempo que se han exiliado a un lugar oculto y los vardenos, un grupo disidente, se ocultan en ciudades protegidas. Cuando Eragon, un joven de 15 anos que vive en una pequena aldea, se encuentra con una piedra preciosa en medio del bosque a donde ha ido a cazar, poco se espera que ese suceso vaya a cambiar su vida y el destino de Alagaesia. Lo unico que desea es venderla para asi asegurar la subsistencia de su familia durante el duro invierno. Sin embargo, una noche la gema se rompe y lo que sale de ella lo llevara a un viaje que lo convertira en heroe. Podra Eragon tomar la responsabilidad de los legendarios jinetes de dragones? La esperanza del Imperio descansa en sus manos... / Fifteen-year-old Eragon believes that he is merely a poor farm boy until his destiny as a Dragon Rider is revealed. Gifted with only an ancient sword, a loyal dragon, and sage advice from an old storyteller, Eragon is soon swept into a dangerous tapestry of magic, glory, and power. Now his choices could save or destroy the Empire. [via]

  • Estudio En Escarlata
    by Arthur Conan Doyle
    ISBN 8497647025 (84-9764-702-5)
    Softcover, Edimat Libros

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Estudio En Escarlata'
    Book summary:

    Estudio en escarlata de Doyle, Arthur Conan

    [via]

  • Everything Is Illuminated
    by Jonathan Safran Foer
    ISBN 0060529709 (0-06-052970-9)
    Softcover, Harpercollins

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Everything Is Illuminated'
    Book summary:

    The simplest thing would be to describe Everything Is Illuminated, Jonathan Safran Foer's accomplished debut, as a novel about the Holocaust. It is, but that really fails to do justice to the sheer ambition of this book. The main story is a grimly familiar one. A young Jewish American--who just happens to be called Jonathan Safran Foer--travels to the Ukraine in the hope of finding the woman who saved his grandfather from the Nazis. He is aided in his search by Alex Perchov, a naïve Ukrainian translator, Alex's grandfather (also called Alex), and a flatulent mongrel dog named Sammy Davis Jr. Jr. On their journey through Eastern Europe's obliterated landscape they unearth facts about the Nazi atrocities and the extent of Ukrainian complicity that have implications for Perchov as well as Safran Foer. This narrative is not, however, recounted from (the character) Jonathan Safran Foer's perspective. It is relayed through a series of letters that Alex sends to Foer. These are written in the kind of broken Russo-English normally reserved for Bond villains or Latka from Taxi. Interspersed between these letters are fragments of a novel by Safran Foer--a wonderfully imagined, almost magical realist, account of life in the shtetl before the Nazis destroyed it. These are in turn commented on by Alex, creating an additional metafictional angle to the tale.

    If all this sounds a little daunting, don't be put off; Safran Foer is an extremely funny as well as intelligent writer who combines some of the best Jewish folk yarns since Isaac Bashevis Singer with a quite heartbreaking meditation on love, friendship, and loss. --Travis Elborough, Amazon.co.uk [via]

  • The Franchise Affair
    by Josephine Tey
    ISBN 002008823X (0-02-008823-X)
    Softcover, Simon & Schuster

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Franchise Affair'
    Book summary:

    Though Josephine Tey is not, perhaps, as well known as Agatha Christie, her contribution to the Golden Age of mysteries is unquestioned. In contrast to Christie, Tey rejected formulas and long-running series in favor of experimentation with new settings and odd conjunctions of character and subject matter. Her historical tale The Daughter of Time is frequently cited as one of the greatest mysteries of all time.

    The Franchise Affair resembles some of the best work of Poe in its introduction of an apparently inhuman evil in an otherwise sedate country setting. Robert Blair, a lawyer who prides himself on his ability to avoid work of any significance, is interrupted one evening by a phone call from Marion Sharpe. Ms. Sharpe and her mother live in a run-down estate known as the Franchise, and their lives drew little attention until Betty Kane charged them with an unthinkable crime. Ms. Kane, having disappeared for a month, now says that she was held captive in the attic of the Franchise during her entire absence. While her story seems absurd, her recollection of minute details about the interior of the house sway even Scotland Yard. Blair--who Ms. Sharpe has chosen for her defense because, as she says, he is "someone of my own sort"--must dust off his neurons and undertake some serious sleuthing if his client is to beat these serious charges. As with all fine mysteries, one has the sense of being in a sea of clues with a solution just out of reach. The Franchise Affair is a classic mystery, and also a superb record of country life in early twentieth century England. --Patrick O'Kelley [via]

  • Furia / Fury
    by Salman Rushdie, Miguel Saenz
    ISBN 8497596420 (84-9759-642-0)
    Softcover, Debolsillo

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Furia / Fury'
    Book summary:

    Malik Solanka, original de Bombay, filósofo educado en Cambridge e inventor de una popular muñeca, abandona un día a su familia en Londres, sin dar ninguna explicación, y se escapa a Nueva York. Lleva la furia dentro y teme haberse convertido en un peligro para los que quiere. Llega a Nueva York en un momento de abundancia sin precedentes, el colmo de la riqueza y del poder americano. Pero la furia está a su alrededor... Un asesino en serie mata a mujeres con un trozo de cemento. Una mujer joven con un gorro de béisbol le acecha. Y otra mujer, de quien se enamorará, le atraerá con una furia diferente, una furia con raíces en un país lejano. Mientras tanto pierde el control de sus propios pensamientos, emociones y deseos. Un gran amor que se ha echado a perder, una pasión que se apoya en cimientos falsos y un tercer amor que, con un poco de suerte, a lo mejor sale bien. Furia es una obra de energía explosiva, despiadada, y a la vez una comedia negra, una investigación profundamente inquietante del lado más oscuro de la naturaleza humana y de la sociedad opulenta. Pocas veces se ha logrado captar la esencia de un lugar y de un tiempo tan intensa y exactamente en una novela. [via]

  • Gaudy Night
    by Dorothy Leigh Sayers
    ISBN 0060550228 (0-06-055022-8)
    Hardcover, Harpercollins

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Gaudy Night'
    Book summary:

    Obscene graffiti, poison pen letters and a disgusting effigy greeted Harriet Vane on her return to Oxford. A graduate of ten years before and now a successful novelist, this should have been a pleasant, nostalgic visit for her. She asks her lover, Lord Peter Wimsey, for help. [via]

  • The Glass Bead Game (Magister Ludi)
    by Hermann Hesse
    ISBN 0030818516 (0-03-081851-6)
    Hardcover, Holt, Rinehart and Winston

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Glass Bead Game (Magister Ludi)'
    Book summary:

    The Glass Bead Game, for which Hesse won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1946, is the authors last and crowning achievement, the most imaginative and prophetic of all his novels. Setting the story in the distant postapocalyptic future, Hesse tells of an elite cult of intellectuals who play an elaborate game that uses all the cultural and scientific knowledge of the Ages. The Glass Bead Game is a fascinating tale of the complexity of modern life as well as a classic of modern literature.

    This edition features a Foreword by Theodore Ziolkowski that places the book in the full context of Hesses thought.
    [via]

  • H.M.S Surprise: Library Edition
    by Patrick O'Brian
    ISBN 0002213168 (0-00-221316-8)
    Hardcover, Collins

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'H.M.S Surprise: Library Edition'
    Book summary:

    The stakes are high as HMS Surprise opens, and actor Robert Hardy's sterling reading never lets you forget them. Hardy makes Patrick O'Brian's third novel of high-seas adventure--written in 1973 and set mainly in 1805 on the waters surrounding India and the Orient--seem as immediate as an overdrawn checking account. Money plays a big role, and Captain Jack Aubrey stands to make a lot of it. All he has to do is find Napoleon's fleet--and take their gold away from them. (Running time: three hours, two cassettes) --Lou Schuler [via]

  • Have His Carcase
    by Dorothy L. Sayers
    ISBN 0060550236 (0-06-055023-6)
    Hardcover, Harper & Row

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Have His Carcase'
    Book summary:

    A young woman falls asleep on a deserted beach and wakes to discover the body of a man whose throat has been slashed from ear to ear ...The young woman is the celebrated detective novelist Harriet Vane, once again drawn against her will into a murder investigation in which she herself could be a suspect. Lord Peter Wimsey is only too eager to help her clear her name. 'She combined literary prose with powerful suspense, and it takes a rare talent to achieve that. A truly great storyteller.' Minette Walters [via]

  • The Hollow Hills
    by Mary Stewart
    ISBN 0060548266 (0-06-054826-6)
    Softcover, Harpercollins

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Hollow Hills'
    Book summary:

    Keeping watch over the young Arthur Pendragon, the prince and prophet Merlin Ambrosius is haunted by dreams of the magical sword Caliburn, which has been hidden for centuries. When Uther Pendragon is killed in battle, the time of destiny is at hand, and Arthur must claim the fabled sword to become the true High King of Britain.

    [via]

  • Manzoni, Allessandro: I Promessi Sposi
    I Promessi Sposi
    by Allessandro Manzoni
    ISBN 887754337X (88-7754-337-X)
    Softcover, Distribooks Inc

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'I Promessi Sposi'
  • Dickens, Charles: Illustrated Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby
  • The Infinite Plan
    by Isabel Allende, Margaret Sayers Peden
    ISBN 0060170166 (0-06-017016-6)
    Hardcover, Harpercollins

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Infinite Plan'
    Book summary:

    Gregory Reeves, the son of a self-styled preacher, struggles to overcome his childhood of poverty and neglect and to take control of his destiny. By the author of House of the Spirits. 100,000 first printing. $125,000 ad/promo. BOMC. QPB. Tour. [via]

  • The Ionian Mission
    by Patrick O'Brian
    ISBN 0002223651 (0-00-222365-1)
    Hardcover, Harper & Collins

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Ionian Mission'
    Book summary:

    Aubrey and Maturin return to the choppy Mediterranean waters where they first served together, enforcing the Royal Navy's blockade of Toulon. Then the two companions are sent to the Greek Islands, where another series of maritime cliff-hangers awaits them. O'Brian performs his peculiar narrative magic as adeptly as ever, putting (as The Observer would have it) the "spark of character into the sawdust of time." [via]

  • Juan Salvador Gaviota
    by Richard Bach
    ISBN 9684972040 (968-497-204-0)
    Softcover, Distal USA Inc

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Juan Salvador Gaviota'
    Book summary:

    Una de las mas bellas fábulas escritas por estos tiempos ha sido Juan Salvador Gaviota. Richard Bach ha vendido mas de 30 millones de copias de esta producción. El valor de la libertad, de la amistad, el despego de lo material; tales son los elementos que forman esta fábula. [via]

  • Esquivel, Laura: LA Ley Del Amor
  • Auel, Jean M.: Las Llanuras Del Transito
    Las Llanuras Del Transito
    by Jean M. Auel
    ISBN 9706516271 (970-651-627-1)
    Hardcover, Oceano De Mexico

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Las Llanuras Del Transito'
  • Lord of Light
    by Roger Zelazny
    ISBN 0060567236 (0-06-056723-6)
    Softcover, Eos

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Lord of Light'
    Book summary:

    In the 1960s, Roger Zelazny dazzled the SF world with what seemed to be inexhaustible talent and inventiveness. Lord of Light, his third novel, is his finest book: a science fantasy in which the intricate, colorful mechanisms of Hindu religion, capricious gods, and repeated reincarnations are wittily underpinned by technology. "For six days he had offered many kilowatts of prayer, but the static kept him from being heard On High." The gods are a starship crew who subdued a colony world; developed godlike--though often machine-enhanced--powers during successive lifetimes of mind transfer to new, cloned bodies; and now lord it over descendants of the ship's mere passengers. Their tyranny is opposed by retired god Sam, who mocks the Celestial City, introduces Buddhism to subvert Hindu dogma, allies himself with the planet's native "demons" against Heaven, fights pyrotechnic battles with bizarre troops and weapons, plays dirty with politics and poison, and dies horribly but won't stay dead. It's a huge, lumbering, magical story, told largely in flashback, full of wonderfully ornate language (and one unforgivable pun) that builds up the luminous myth of trickster Sam, Lord of Light. Essential SF reading. --David Langford, Amazon.co.uk [via]

  • The Mauritius Command
    by Patrick O'Brian
    ISBN 000222383X (0-00-222383-X)
    Hardcover, Collins

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Mauritius Command'
    Book summary:

    Ashore without a command--and on half-pay to boot--Jack Aubrey's prayers are answered when Stephen Maturin shows up with a secret mission for him. The two men have been ordered to the Cape of Good Hope. There they hope to dislodge the French garrisons on the islands of Mauritius and La Reunion. Alas, two of their own colleagues--a dilettante and a martinet--prove to be nearly as great an obstacle as the French themselves. [via]

  • Durrell, Lawrence: Mountolive
    Mountolive
    by Lawrence Durrell
    ISBN 9500714477 (950-07-1447-7)
    Softcover, Random House Espanol

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Mountolive'
  • A Moveable Feast
    by Ernest Hemingway
    ISBN 0020519605 (0-02-051960-5)
    Softcover, Simon & Schuster

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'A Moveable Feast'
    Book summary:

    In the preface to A Moveable Feast, Hemingway remarks casually that "if the reader prefers, this book may be regarded as fiction"--and, indeed, fact or fiction, it doesn't matter, for his slim memoir of Paris in the 1920s is as enchanting as anything made up and has become the stuff of legend. Paris in the '20s! Hemingway and his first wife, Hadley, lived happily on $5 a day and still had money for drinks at the Closerie des Lilas, skiing in the Alps, and fishing trips to Spain. On every corner and at every café table, there were the most extraordinary people living wonderful lives and telling fantastic stories. Gertrude Stein invited Hemingway to come every afternoon and sip "fragrant, colorless alcohols" and chat admit her great pictures. He taught Ezra Pound how to box, gossiped with James Joyce, caroused with the fatally insecure Scott Fitzgerald (the acid portraits of him and his wife, Zelda, are notorious). Meanwhile, Hemingway invented a new way of writing based on this simple premise: "All you have to do is write one true sentence. Write the truest sentence you know."

    Hemingway beautifully captures the fragile magic of a special time and place, and he manages to be nostalgic without hitting any false notes of sentimentality. "This is how Paris was in the early days when we were very poor and very happy," he concludes. Originally published in 1964, three years after his suicide, A Moveable Feast was the first of his posthumous books and remains the best. --David Laskin [via]

  • The Namesake
    by Jhumpa Lahiri
    ISBN 000225901X (0-00-225901-X)
    Hardcover, Flamingo

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Namesake'
    Book summary:

    Any talk of The Namesake--Jhumpa Lahiri's follow-up to her Pulitzer Prize-winning debut, Interpreter of Maladies--must begin with a name: Gogol Ganguli. Born to an Indian academic and his wife, Gogol is afflicted from birth with a name that is neither Indian nor American nor even really a first name at all. He is given the name by his father who, before he came to America to study at MIT, was almost killed in a train wreck in India. Rescuers caught sight of the volume of Nikolai Gogol's short stories that he held, and hauled him from the train. Ashoke gives his American-born son the name as a kind of placeholder, and the awkward thing sticks.

    Awkwardness is Gogol's birthright. He grows up a bright American boy, goes to Yale, has pretty girlfriends, becomes a successful architect, but like many second-generation immigrants, he can never quite find his place in the world. There's a lovely section where he dates a wealthy, cultured young Manhattan woman who lives with her charming parents. They fold Gogol into their easy, elegant life, but even here he can find no peace and he breaks off the relationship. His mother finally sets him up on a blind date with the daughter of a Bengali friend, and Gogol thinks he has found his match. Moushumi, like Gogol, is at odds with the Indian-American world she inhabits. She has found, however, a circuitous escape: "At Brown, her rebellion had been academic ... she'd pursued a double major in French. Immersing herself in a third language, a third culture, had been her refuge--she approached French, unlike things American or Indian, without guilt, or misgiving, or expectation of any kind." Lahiri documents these quiet rebellions and random longings with great sensitivity. There's no cleverness or showing-off in The Namesake, just beautifully confident storytelling. Gogol's story is neither comedy nor tragedy; it's simply that ordinary, hard-to-get-down-on-paper commodity: real life. --Claire Dederer [via]

  • Night Watch
    by Terry Pratchett
    ISBN 0060013125 (0-06-001312-5)
    Softcover, Harpercollins

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Night Watch'
    Book summary:

    The new Discworld novel Night Watch has the power and energy that characterizes Terry Pratchett at his occasional best, as well as the wild surreal humour he always gives us. Sam Vimes, running hero of the Guards sequence, finds himself cast back in time to the Ankh-Morpork of his youth--a much nastier city, with an actively deranged Patrician and a sadistic secret police--and finding himself filling in for Keel, the tough honest copper who teaches the young Vimes everything he knows. And, more worryingly, who dies heroically in the insurrection Vimes knows to be imminent. With a psychopath from his own time rising in the vile ranks of the Cable Street Unmentionables complicating things, Vimes has to ensure that history takes its course so that he will have the right future to go back to, and to keep his younger self alive--this is Pratchett's plotting at its most thoroughly constructed and wonderfully devious. Ankh-Morpork has for a long time been one of the most thoroughly imagined cities in fantasy--here Pratchett gives us a fascinating gloomy glimpse of its past and of the younger selves of some of his best-loved characters, and of the brief-lived People's Republic of Treacle-Mine Road. --Roz Kaveney [via]

  • Postcards
    by Annie Proulx
    ISBN 0020811853 (0-02-081185-3)
    Hardcover, Collier Books

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Postcards'
    Book summary:

    Reproduced as graphics that preface narrative sections, the postcards in this novel -- communications between the Blood family and their son Loyal, as well as other personal mail and advertising material -- progressively reveal the insecurity of the rural Bloods in the changing post-war world. Loyal has fled into exile after an accidental killing, but cannot find a haven of rest. The family patriarch, Mink, writes vitriolic letters to local agricultural agents when the real object of his ire is his absent son. Loyal's brother sends off for an artificial arm to replace the one he lost in an accident; his sister answers a mail order ad for a husband. Through the mail, Proulx inventively reveals the inchoate longings of a difficult existence in this winner of the 1993 PEN/Faulkner Award. [via]

  • Prey
    by Michael Crichton
    ISBN 0060536985 (0-06-053698-5)
    Softcover, Harpercollins

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Prey'
    Book summary:

    In Prey, bestselling author Michael Crichton introduces bad guys that are too small to be seen with the naked eye but no less deadly or intriguing than the runaway dinosaurs that made 1990's Jurassic Park such a blockbuster success.

    High-tech whistle-blower Jack Forman used to specialize in programming computers to solve problems by mimicking the behavior of efficient wild animals--swarming bees or hunting hyena packs, for example. Now he's unemployed and is finally starting to enjoy his new role as stay-at-home dad. All would be domestic bliss if it were not for Jack's suspicions that his wife, who's been behaving strangely and working long hours at the top-secret research labs of Xymos Technology, is having an affair. When he's called in to help with her hush-hush project, it seems like the perfect opportunity to see what his wife's been doing, but Jack quickly finds there's a lot more going on in the lab than an illicit affair. Within hours of his arrival at the remote testing center, Jack discovers his wife's firm has created self-replicating nanotechnology--a literal swarm of microscopic machines. Originally meant to serve as a military eye in the sky, the swarm has now escaped into the environment and is seemingly intent on killing the scientists trapped in the facility. The reader realizes early, however, that Jack, his wife, and fellow scientists have more to fear from the hidden dangers within the lab than from the predators without. The monsters may be smaller in this book, but Crichton's skill for suspense has grown, making Prey a scary read that's hard to set aside, though not without its minor flaws. The science in this novel requires more explanation than did the cloning of dinosaurs, leading to lengthy and sometimes dry academic lessons. And while the coincidence of Xymos's new technology running on the same program Jack created at his previous job keeps the plot moving, it may be more than some readers can swallow. But, thanks in part to a sobering foreword in which Crichton warns of the real dangers of technology that continues to evolve more quickly than common sense, Prey succeeds in gripping readers with a tense and frightening tale of scientific suspense. --Benjamin Reese [via]

  • The Reverse of the Medal
    by Patrick O'Brien
    ISBN 0002227339 (0-00-222733-9)
    Hardcover, Harpercollins

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Reverse of the Medal'
    Book summary:

    Ashore between cruises, Captain Jack Aubrey is persuaded to sink some money into an investment scheme. Soon this innocent decision enmeshes him in various criminal and even treasonous enterprises, which threaten to destroy his entire career. Bad luck? A deliberate plot? Read this latest installment of the Aubrey-Maturin saga to find out. [via]

  • Ringworld
    by Larry Niven
    ISBN 0030206561 (0-03-020656-1)
    Hardcover, Henry Holt & Co

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Ringworld'
    Book summary:

    Ringworld is the most stunning artifact in known space - an artificial world with 3 million times Earth's surface area. [via]

  • Banks, Russell: Russell Banks Reading Continental Drift
  • The Screwtape Letters
    by C. S. Lewis
    ISBN 0060652934 (0-06-065293-4)
    Softcover, Harpercollins

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Screwtape Letters'
    Book summary:

    This adaptation of C.S. Lewis's biting satire received a 1999 Grammy nomination for best spoken-word performance, and it's easy to see why--the story fits the format perfectly. It's relatively brief (the unabridged reading takes a mere four hours), and contains only one character--the demon Screwtape, who writes letters to his novice nephew Wormwood, instructing him on how to best tempt his "patient" (a wayward soul on earth) into the bosom of "our Lord below."

    Obviously, the book wasn't written with former Monty Python John Cleese in mind, but it's hard to imagine a better Screwtape. Cleese's voice provides the perfect vehicle for Lewis's dry, razor-edged wit. His uncanny comic timing and ability to milk each phrase for maximum effect betray an infectious enthusiasm for the story. It's clear that he's having a great time reading, and it's impossible not to laugh along with him. This inspired pairing of two of the 20th century's greatest wits makes for a meditation on the dark side of spiritual guidance that's as relevant and funny today as it was in Lewis's war-torn England. (Running time: 4 hours, 3 cassettes) --Andrew Neiland [via]

  • Son of a Witch
    by Gregory Maguire
    ISBN 0060747226 (0-06-074722-6)
    Softcover, Harpercollins

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Son of a Witch'
    Book summary:

    The Wicked Years continue in Gregory Maguires Son of a Witchthe heroic saga of the hapless yet determined young man who may or may not be the offspring of the fabled Wicked Witch of the West. A New York Times bestseller like its predecessor, the remarkable Wicked, Son of a Witch follows the boy Liir on his dark odyssey across an ingeniously re-imagined and nearly unrecognizable Land of Oza journey that will take him deep into the bowels of the Emerald City, lately abandoned by the Wizard, and into the jaws of dragons. At once a grim fairy tale and an uplifting adventure, Son of a Witch is a true wonder.

    [via]

  • Still Life
    by A. S. Byatt, Antonia Susan Byatt
    ISBN 0020178557 (0-02-017855-7)
    Softcover, Simon & Schuster

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Still Life'
    Book summary:

    Fictional Novel, Literary Fiction [via]

  • Sayers, Dorothy L.: Strong Poison
    Strong Poison
    by Dorothy L. Sayers
    ISBN 0060550252 (0-06-055025-2)
    Hardcover, Harper & Row

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Strong Poison'
  • Thief of Time
    by Terry Pratchett
    ISBN 0060199563 (0-06-019956-3)
    Hardcover, HarperCollins Publishers

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Thief of Time'
    Book summary:

    It was only a matter of time before Terry Pratchett would win the minds and hearts of America. Already a worldwide sensation and Great Britain's indisputable number one author, this intellectually audacious and effortlessly hilarious writer sold more hardcover books in the United Kingdom during the previous decade than any other living novelist. His novels have reigned supreme on English bestseller lists since before the Iron Lady left Downing Street, and though some things have changed since then, Pratchett, thankfully, continues to pen insightfully irreverent tales set in a world a lot like our own -- only different.

    Celebrated as one of the keenest practitioners of satire and parody at work today -- alongside Kurt Vonnegut, Douglas Adams, and Carl Hiaasen -- Terry Pratchett commands a loyal and ever-increasing number of readers and appreciative critics from coast to coast in our own country. As he skewers all aspects of modern life -- and especially our sacred cows -- Pratchett makes us laugh and challenges us to think. And he's at his sharpest, most uproarious best in Thief of Time.

    Everybody wants more time, which is why on Discworld its management is entrusted to the experts: the venerable Monks of History, who store it and pump it from where it's wasted, like underwater (after all, how much time does a codfish really need?) to places like cities, where harried citizens are forever lamenting, "Oh where does the time go?"

    And while everyone always talks about slowing down, one clever soul is about to stop. Stop time, that is. For good. Going against everything known (and the nine tenths of everything that remains unknown), a young horologist has been commissioned to build the world's first truly accurate clock. It falls to History Monk Lu-Tze and his apprentice Lobsang Ludd to find the timepiece and stop it before it starts. For if the Perfect Clock starts ticking, Time -- as we know it -- will stop. And then the trouble will really begin.

    A superb send-up of science and philosophy, religion and death (after all, isn't that where time stops, for most of us, anyway?), and a host of other timely topics, Thief of Time provides the perfect opportunity to kick back and unwind. So don't put off till tomorrow what you could do today. Read Thief of Time. Right this minute. Because tomorrow may not come. (You'll have to read the book to find out why. This is a Terry Pratchett novel, after all.)

    Tick ...

    [via]

  • The Thirteen Gun Salute
    by Patrick O'Brian
    ISBN 0002234602 (0-00-223460-2)
    Hardcover, Collins

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Thirteen Gun Salute'
    Book summary:

    Will Napoleon Bonaparte form an alliance with the Malay princes of the South China Sea? Not if Jack Aubrey can help it. Conveying a diplomatic mission to the Sultan's court, Aubrey and company must also contend with orangutans, typhoons, and a squadron of wily French envoys. [via]

  • UN Saco De Huesos
    by Stephen King
    ISBN 8497595963 (84-9759-596-3)
    Softcover, Random House Mondadori

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'UN Saco De Huesos'
  • The Wapshot Chronicle
    by John Cheever
    ISBN 0060528877 (0-06-052887-7)
    Softcover, Harpercollins

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Wapshot Chronicle'
    Book summary:

    When The Wapshot Chronicle was published in 1957, John Cheever was already recognized as a writer of superb short stories. But The Wapshot Chronicle, which won the 1958 National Book Award, established him as a major novelist.

    Based in part on Cheevers adolescence in New England, the novel follows the destinies of the impecunious and wildly eccentric Wapshots of St. Botolphs, a quintessential Massachusetts fishing village. Here are the stories of Captain Leander Wapshot, venerable sea dog and would-be suicide; of his licentious older son, Moses; and of Moses adoring and errant younger brother, Coverly. Tragic and funny, ribald and splendidly picaresque, The Wapshot Chronicle is a family narrative in the tradition of Trollope, Dickens, and Henry James.

    [via]

  • Wouk, Herman: Winds of War
    Winds of War
    by Herman Wouk
    ISBN 0002219417 (0-00-221941-7)
    Hardcover, Collins

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Winds of War'
  • Spanish

    Italian

    Dutch

    Danish

    Catalan