Fiction & related items

  • The Ha-Ha

    £9.99

    A tea party at an Oxford college. Earnest undergraduates in floral dresses clink cups, discussing essay-crises, punting, summer balls. But to one student, they are grotesquely transformed: she is sitting among ominous armadillos with scaly shells, buzzing with black flies. Then, the laughter comes. As she is engulfed by mirthless hysterics, the Principal has no choice but to send her away. Josephine’s entrance into the world of other people wasn’t what she imagined. Since her mother’s death, reality seems a badly painted canvas, viewed through the wrong end of a telescope; she always thinks the wrong things, cowed by the brightness of existence. It is a relief to belong, for once, within the mental institution where she is taken. But eventually, she must reintegrate with society – and through a transformative encounter with a fellow patient, a return to real life seems possible.

  • Edenglassie

    £10.99

    Two extraordinary stories set five generations apart are connected by a violent colonial history, in Melissa Lucashenko’s stunning historical epic

  • The Volcano Daughters

    £9.99

    Set in 20th-century El Salvador, The Volcano Daughters is a powerful novel about sisterhood, art, and a community of women who refuse to be silenced.

  • Saraswati

    £16.99

    Centuries ago, the holy river Saraswati flowed through what is now Punjab. Many dismiss this as myth, but when Satnam arrives in his ancestral village for his grandmother’s funeral, he finds water in the dried-up well behind her house. The discovery sets in motion a contentious scheme to unearth the lost river as an act of Hindu nationalist pride. The river changes the course of Satnam’s life, and those of six others. As legends and histories resurface, the distant relatives – from a Canadian eco-saboteur to a Mauritian pest exterminator to a Bollywood stunt double – are brought together in a rapidly changing India. Ambitious, moving and brimming with folklore, ‘Saraswati’ is a tour de force from one of Britain’s most feted young writers.

  • The Fertile Earth

    £9.99

    A thrilling story of love and resistance about two young people born across social lines, set against a tumultuous political landscape in India

  • Stag dance

    £16.99

    From the adventures of a lonely logger who, deep in the forest, joins his workmates to dance dressed as a woman, to the story of an obsessive boarding-school romance, to the dizzying spectacle of a gender apocalypse brought about by an unstable ex-girlfriend, Peters’ keen eye for the rough edges of trans community and desire reveals fresh possibilities.

  • The alternatives

    £9.99

    The lives of four sisters begin to unravel when one of them disappears, in this thought-provoking, sharply comic Irish novel

  • The fires of Gallipoli

    £18.99

    A deeply moving story of courage, resilience and self-discovery, set during the Gallipoli campaign of 1915-16

  • Herscht 07769

    £20.00

    Florian Herscht has a problem: having faithfully attended Herr Köhler’s classes in particle physics for two years, he is convinced that global cataclysm is imminent. And so he embarks upon a one-sided correspondence with Chancellor Angela Merkel, hoping to convince her of the imminent danger of the complete destruction of all physical matter. Written in one cascading sentence with the force of atomic particles colliding, Krasznahorkai’s latest novel is a tour de force, a morality play of blistering satire, a devastating encapsulation of our helplessness in the face of the moral and environmental dilemmas we face.

  • Madwoman

    £16.99

    Brave, hilarious and full of surprising twists, Madwoman is a story of violence, recovery, and Clove’s refusal to be defined by her worst experiences. 

  • More days at the Morisaki bookshop

    £10.99

    In Tokyo, there is a neighbourhood with the highest number of bookstores in the world. It is called Jinbocho where book lovers can browse to their heart’s delight and where hunters of first editions or autographed copies prowl the bookcases. The Morisaki bookshop, a small family-run shop, is so packed with books that barely five people can fit inside. Books crowd the shelves and invade every corner of the floor; when a customer arrives, the owner, Satoru, immediately pops out from behind the counter. Recently, his wife Momoko has joined him, and often, in her free time after work, their niece Takako also helps out. For the first time, the girl does not feel lonely; she has new friends and new rituals to keep her company: the annual Jinbocho festival, the café around the corner, or an unexpected visitor.

  • A true account

    £9.99

    From New York Times bestselling author Katherine Howe comes a daring first-hand account of Hannah Masury’s rousing adventure as one of the most feared and admired sea rovers of all time

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