Fiction

  • Don’t Let Him In

    £20.00

    He’s the perfect man. He says he loves you. You think he might even be made for you. Before long he’s moved into your house – and into your heart. And then he leaves for days at a time. You don’t know where he’s gone or who he’s with. And you realise – if you looked back – you’d say to yourself: Don’t let him in.

  • The Year of the Ox

    £6.99

    It’s almost time for the Year of the Ox! Ming and Miaow are busy helping their ox friend Xiao Nioh get ready to kick off the festivities with a dance performance to wow the crowds. But when Xiao Nioh’s father Lord Chiyou makes clear his disapproval, the trio find themselves sent on a quest to save a village from a fearsome beast. Xiao Nioh is worried. He can’t fight a monster – he’s a dancer, not a warrior like his dad! Can the Guardians help their friend prove himself to his father without giving up his passion, or is the Year of the Ox ruined before it’s even had a chance to start?

  • A Fine Night for Dying

    £8.99

    In Jack Higgins’ final spy thriller featuring the top-secret Bureau, their premier agent Paul Chavasse is sent on an undercover mission to smash a gang of cross-Channel people smugglers. Will he get out alive?

  • The Wedding People

    £9.99
  • The Seventh Floor

    £9.99

    A Russian arrives in Singapore with a secret to sell. When the Russian is killed and Sam Joseph, the CIA officer dispatched for the meet, goes missing, Artemis Procter is made a scapegoat and run out of the service. Traded back in a spy swap, Sam appears at Procter’s central Florida doorstep months later with an explosive secret: there is a Russian mole hidden deep within the upper reaches of CIA. As Procter and Sam investigate, they arrive at a shortlist of suspects made up of both Procter’s closest friends and fiercest enemies. The hunt soon requires Procter to dredge up her own checkered past in service of CIA, placing her and Sam into the sights of a savvy Russian spymaster who will protect Moscow’s mole in Langley at all costs, even if it means wreaking bloody havoc across the United States.

  • The Bormann Testament

    £8.99

    Somewhere in Germany was hidden a manuscript that would rock Western Europe to its foundations: the testament of Martin Bormann.

  • Year of the Tiger

    £8.99

    The Bureau’s most deadly enforcer Paul Chavasse is back in a revised and expanded edition of Jack Higgins’ classic spy thriller.

  • Dark Side of the Street

    £8.99

    Special agent Paul Chavasse is familiar with undercover missions that no one else will undertake – but none have entailed being sent to prison for seven years.

  • Midnight Never Comes

    £8.99

    British Intelligence’s maverick agent Paul Chavasse has been forgotten. Now his country needs him and he’s back – back from the dead, back at work, and most importantly back in print!

  • The Keys of Hell

    £8.99

    Super-spy Paul Chavasse – British Intelligence’s most maverick agent – is embroiled in an deadly double-cross, in this new revised edition of Jack Higgins’ classic spy thriller.

  • The Compound

    £16.99

    Lord of the Flies meets Love Island – dark, thrilling, and delightfully twisted’ LOUISE O’NEILL

    ‘So gripping and propulsive that it beats reality TV at its own game. Why watch TV when Aisling Rawle does it better?’ TORREY PETERS

    ‘THIS is the book to read this summer. Easily one of my favourite novels I’ve read this year? 10 out of 10’CECELIA AHERN

  • Stone and Sky

    £20.00

    When a body is found in a bus stop, fresh from the sea, the case smells fishy from the off. Something may be stirring beyond the bay – but there’s something far stranger in the sky.

Nomad Books