|
Showing 1 - 21 of
21 matches in All departments
|
Oliver Twist (Paperback)
Charles Dickens; Introduction by Frederick Busch
|
R154
R135
Discovery Miles 1 350
Save R19 (12%)
|
Ships in 7 - 11 working days
|
One of the great novelist s most popular works, Oliver Twist is
also the purest distillation of Dickens s genius. This tale of the
orphan who is reared in a workhouse and runs away to London is a
novel of social protest, a morality tale, and a detective story.
Oliver Twist presents some of the most sinister characters in
Dickens: the master thief, Fagin; the leering Artful Dodger; the
murderer, Bill Sikes along with some of his most sentimental and
comical characters. Only Dickens can give us nightmare and daydream
together. According to George Orwell, in Oliver Twist Dickens
attacked English institutions with a ferocity that has never since
been approached. Yet he managed to do it without making himself
hated, and, more than this, the very people he attacked have
welcomed him so completely that he has become a national
institution himself. With an Introduction by Frederick Buschand an
Afterword by Edward Le Comte"
|
North (Paperback)
Frederick Busch
|
R498
R436
Discovery Miles 4 360
Save R62 (12%)
|
Ships in 7 - 11 working days
|
Combining the pace of a detective story with the bold prose of a
master storyteller, North is both an adventure and a pilgrimage.
Alone and haunted by memories of his dead wife and child, Jack who
prowled the backwaters of Girls returns to upstate New York from
the Carolina coast, where he has been working as a security guard.
A New York lawyer hires him to find her missing nephew, last seen
in the area of Jack's northern hometown. His search gradually
uncovers a dark underside of rural life and a cast of dangerous
characters. Jack is besieged by memories as he uncovers a brutal
crime and finds himself in a turbulent relationship with a
treacherous woman. In trying to save another's life, Jack must
relive his own; memory, obsession, and reality fuse; and Jack
discovers the truth of Faulkner's observation that the past is not
really past; it's not even over.
Psychologist Alexander Lescziak savors a life of quiet
sophistication on Manhattan's Upper West Side, turning a blind eye
to the past of his Polish emigre parents. Then a new patient
declares that he is the doctor's half-brother, the product of a
union between Lescziak's Jewish mother and a German prisoner of
war. The confrontation jolts Lescziak out of his complacency:
suddenly, his failing marriage, his wife's infatuation with his
best friend, and the disappearance of his young lover and suicidal
patient, Nella, close in on him. Lescziak escapes into the recesses
of his imagination, where his mother's affair with the German
prisoner comes to life in precise, gorgeous detail. The novel
unfolds into a romance set in England's Lake District in wartime,
as Busch shows how our past presses on the present.
Here is that rarest and most satisfying of books: a grown-up love
story. Harry and Catherine have been falling in and out of love for
many years. She is divorced, determinedly raising two sons, and
running a small gallery in upstate New York. He is an
ex-newspaperman, a wistful drifter, now assistant to a New York
senator. After a long separation, Harry is assigned to find out
whether a new shopping mall in Catherine's neighborhood will
desecrate an historic black cemetery. Catherine is living with
another man, a contractor for the mall who finds both his financial
interests and his relationship with Catherine threatened by Harry.
With penetrating acuity and generosity of spirit, one of our finest
writers brings us what David Bradley calls "a book people will love
and be proud of loving." "Unsuppressed emotion, painful honesty . .
. all of it in the most lively and supple language anyone is
writing today." Rosellen Brown"
Frederick Busch, one of America's most distinguished novelists, has had an enduring love affair with great books and with the difficult, and sometimes personally dangerous, work that is required to produce them. For Busch, as he writes of his own career and those of his great elders, Dickens, Melville, Hemingway, and others, there was to be no other recourse save the dangerous profession. Writing out of an experience of risk that is suffused with affection, Busch brilliantly explores the hazards of the writing life and its effect on the achievement of benchmark writers.
Some of the stories in this "brilliant" (Library Journal, starred
review) collection feature the war in Iraq, and others feature
domestic wars; in every case, a character seeks to comfort or to
save someone. Physical love, familial love, the need to give
comfort and the need for comfort are themes skillfully rendered by
this "master of the genre" (Booklist, starred review), whose
achievements earned the American Academy of Arts and Letters Award
of Merit for lifetime achievement in short fiction."
"All the stories in this remarkable cycle of stories are assigned
an address. Each is also a separate life, yet part of the larger
life that a neighborhood is; this book] is an artist's inhabiting
of other lives out of love, compassion, anger, and pain. Like the
neighborhood, the stories are various. The mother of a damaged
child tells us, 'I know how he dreams me. I know because I dream
his dreams.' A male bureaucrat laments, 'I am too bored to move. No
man can leave his wife for reasons like these....' In these
stories, Rosellen Brown is Anglo, Puerto Rican, African American,
Caucasian, male, female, parent, child. That is the artist's
responsibility, the being of so many. Furthermore, it is a
brilliantly written book that, in a period of fiction sniffing and
snorting at itself, reminds us how the first rate will not go
away." from the foreword by Frederick Busch"
Contributors include Lee K. Abbott, Charles Baxter, Ray Bradbury,
Raymond Carver, Shelby Foote, John Gardner, Joyce Carol Oates, John
Updike, Tobias Wolff, and Flannery O'Connor, among others.
A contemporary of Ann Beattie and Tobias Wolff, Frederick Busch was
a master craftsman of the form; his subjects were single-event
moments in so-called ordinary life. The stories in this volume,
selected by Pulitzer Prize winner Elizabeth Strout, are tales of
families trying to heal their wounds, save their marriages, and
rescue their children. In "Ralph the Duck," a security guard
struggles to hang on to his marriage. In "Name the Name," a
traveling teacher attends to students outside the school, including
his own son, locked in a country jail. In Busch's work, we are
reminded that we have no idea what goes on behind closed doors or
in the mind of another. In the words of Raymond Carver, "With
astonishing felicity of detail, Busch presents us with a world
where real things are at stake and sometimes, as in the real world,
everything is risked."
From his first volume, Hardwater Country (1974), to his most
recent, Rescue Missions (2006), this volume selects thirty stories
from an "American master" (Dan Cryer, Newsday), showcasing a body
of work that is sure to shape American fiction for generations to
come."
A contemporary of Ann Beattie and Tobias Wolff, Frederick Busch was
a master craftsman of the form; his subjects were single-event
moments in so-called ordinary life. The stories in this volume,
selected by Pulitzer Prize winner Elizabeth Strout, are tales of
families trying to heal their wounds, save their marriages, and
rescue their children. In "Ralph the Duck," a security guard
struggles to hang on to his marriage. In "Name the Name," a
traveling teacher attends to students outside the school, including
his own son, locked in a country jail. In Busch's work, we are
reminded that we have no idea what goes on behind closed doors or
in the mind of another. In the words of Raymond Carver, "With
astonishing felicity of detail, Busch presents us with a world
where real things are at stake and sometimes, as in the real world,
everything is risked."
From his first volume, Hardwater Country (1974), to his most
recent, Rescue Missions (2006), this volume selects thirty stories
from an "American master" (Dan Cryer, Newsday), showcasing a body
of work that is sure to shape American fiction for generations to
come."
An immensely powerful story, The Night Inspector follows the extraordinary life of William Bartholomew, a maimed veteran of the Civil War, as he returns from the battlefields to New York City, bent on reversing his fortunes. It is there he meets Jessie, a Creole prostitute who engages him in a venture that has its origins in the complexities and despair of the conflict he has left behind. He also befriends a deputy inspector of customs named Herman Melville who, largely forgotten as a writer, is condemned to live in the wake of his vanished literary success and in the turmoil of his fractured family.
Delving into the depths of this country's heart and soul, Frederick Busch's stunning novel is a gripping portrait of a nation trying to heal from the ravages of war--and of one man's attempt to recapture a taste for life through the surging currents of his own emotions, ambitions, and shattered conscience.
A New York Times Notable Book
In the unrelenting cold and bitter winter of upstate New York, Jack and his wife, Fanny, are trying to cope with the desperate sorrow they feel over the death of their young daughter. The loss forms a chasm in their relationship as Jack, a sardonic Vietnam vet, looks for a way to heal them both.
Then, in a nearby town, a fourteen-year-old girl disappears somewhere between her home and church. Though she is just one of the hundreds of children who vanish every year in America, Jack turns all his attention to this little girl. For finding what has become of this child could be Jack's salvation--if he can just get to her in time. . . .
This is a short, powerful moral tale that sheds light upon the
insidious nature of evil and the grip history holds on the lives of
the seemingly protected innocent.
Frederick Busch's novel War Babies is a short, powerful moral tale
that sheds light upon the insidious nature of evil and the grip
history holds on the lives of the seemingly protected innocent.
Peter Santore, the narrator, is an American lawyer in his
mid-thirties come to England to track down a certain Hilary
Pennels, the daughter of a Korean War hero who died in a P.O.W.
camp -- the same camp in which Peter's own father turned traitor
and whose informing became, perhaps, the cause of Hilary's father's
death. Only Hilary's guardian, Fox -- himself a survivor of the
camp -- can explain, if he will, the troubling past that haunts the
now fully grown war babies. As Frederick Busch's relentless
narrative bears down upon this complexity of betrayals, the lines
between exploiter and exploited become eerily blurred.
The French Revolution comes to vivid life in Charles Dickens's
famous novel about the best of times and the worst of times... The
storming of the Bastille the death carts with their doomed human
cargo the swift drop of the guillotine blade this is the French
Revolution that Charles Dickens vividly captures in his famous work
A Tale of Two Cities. With dramatic eloquence, he brings to life a
time of terror and treason, a starving people rising in frenzy and
hate to overthrow a corrupt and decadent regime. With insight and
compassion, Dickens casts his novel of unforgettable scenes with
some memorable characters: the sinister Madame Defarge, knitting
her patterns of death; the gentle Lucie Manette, unswerving in her
devotion to her broken father; Charles Darnay, the lover with a
secret past; and dissolute Sydney Carton, whose unlikely heroism
gives his life meaning. With an Introduction by Frederick Busch and
an Afterword by A. N. Wilson"
|
Hard Times (Paperback)
Charles Dickens; Introduction by Frederick Busch
|
R110
R88
Discovery Miles 880
Save R22 (20%)
|
Out of stock
|
Dickens's scathing portrait of Victorian industrial society.
Coketown, the depressed mill town that is the setting for one of
Charles Dickens's most powerful and unforgettable novels, is all
brick, machinery, and smoke-darkened chimneys. Its emblematic
citizen, the schoolmaster Thomas Gradgrind, lives to impose his
version of education: facts and statistics that feed the mind while
starving the soul and spirit. Inflexible and unyielding, he places
conformity above curiosity and logic over sentiment, only to see
his philosophy warp and destroy the lives of his own family. Filled
with memorable characters and scenes, Hard Times is a daring novel
of ideas--and, ultimately, a celebration of love, hope, and
imagination. With an Introduction by Frederick Busch and an
Afterword by Jane Smiley
|
You may like...
Die Stropers
Danny Keogh, Benre Labuschagne, …
DVD
(2)
R150
R30
Discovery Miles 300
|