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Daughter of Fortune – Isabel Allende

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Book group book sets

(Updated May 2007)



We cannot always guarantee that every copy of a set will be available, especially

at short notice, but will do our best!



Contact Karen Peebles, Reading Groups Co-ordinator at Newbury Library to book

sets or for further information.

Tel:01635 519900 or email Karen at kpeebles@westberks.gov.uk



Highlighted titles are those which have arrived as new sets in 2007.







Isabel Allende - Daughter of Fortune

Isabel Allende's best novel since The House of the Spirits. Set in Anglophile Chile and

goldrush California during the middle years of the nineteenth century, this magnificent

romance tells the story of English foundling Eliza Sommers who grows up in the bustling

entrepot of Valparaiso. Eliza is a spirited, sparky and ambitious romantic who becomes

embroiled in a forbidden love affair with the charismatic but capricious Joaquin Andieta.

When he disappears suddenly for California, and the promise of riches that rumours of

gold strikes have brought him, she can but follow after him... (8 copies)



Martin Amis – The Information Richard Tull, a failed novelist, contemplates with

jealousy the success of his rival and friend Gwyn Barry. He looks in vain for a means of

damaging Gwyn's reputation, and finally finds someone who will do this for him in

exchange for cash. (10 copies)



Margaret Atwood – The Blind Assassin

"It's loss and regret and misery and yearning that drive the story forward," writes

Margaret Atwood, towards the end of her impressive and complex new novel, The Blind

Assassin. It's a melancholic account of why writers write--and readers read--and one

that frames the different lives told through this book.

With the intelligence, subtlety and remarkable characterisation associated with Atwood's

writing (from her first novel, The Edible Woman through to the best-selling Alias Grace),

the two stories in the book play with one another--sustaining an uncertainty about who

has done what to who and why to the very end of this compelling book. (12 copies)



Beryl Bainbridge - Master Georgie

A novel about one family's experiences in the Crimean War. When the Battle of

Inkerman was over, five survivors were assembled in front of a camera. A sixth figure -

Master Georgie - added symmetry to the group. In the distance a young woman circled

round and round like a bird above a robbed nest. (15 copies)



Iain Banks – The Bridge

A man lies in a coma after a near fatal accident. His body broken, his memory vanished,

he finds himself in the surreal world of the bridge - a world where dreams and fantasy,

past and future fuse. Who is this man? Where is he? Is he more dead than alive? Or

has he never been so alive before? (10 copies)



Iain Banks – The Wasp Factory

1

Frank, no ordinary sixteen-year-old, lives with his father outside a remote Scottish

village. Their life is, to say the least, unconventional. Frank's mother abandoned them

years ago: his elder brother Eric is confined to a psychiatric hospital; and his father

measures out his eccentricities on an imperial scale. Frank has turned to strange acts of

violence to vent his frustrations. In the bizarre daily rituals there is some solace. But

when news comes of Eric's escape from the hospital Frank has to prepare the ground

for his brother's inevitable return - an event that explodes the mysteries of the past and

changes Frank utterly. (10 copies)







Joan Barfoot – Getting Over Edgar

Gwen's husband, Edgar, walks out on their marriage in pursuit of excitement. The

requisite red convertible, however, leads not to eternal youth but to a premature death

by the 8.20 eastbound train. The story then follows Gwen and her uncharacteristic

behaviour in the wake of Edgar's death. (9 copies)



Alessandro Baricco - Silk

When an epidemic threatens to destroy the silk trade in France, Herve Joncour leaves

his small town and travels to Japan to obtain eggs for a fresh breeding of silk worms.

There he falls in love with another man's concubine, and during subsequent visits their

secret and silent affair develops. (13 copies)



Pat Barker - Another World

Nick's grandfather Geordie lies dying. As Nick watches, Geordie relives the horrors

surrounding his brother's death. Meanwhile the children, who have been organized into

decorating the living room, peel away the wallpaper to reveal an obscene portrait of an

Edwardian family. (12 copies)



Julian Barnes – Arthur & George

Semi-fictional account of Conan Doyle’s involvement in the case of George Edalji, the

victim of a famous miscarriage of justice in 1903, convicted of mutilating livestock in his

parish. After George’s release from prison, Arthur Conan Doyle championed his case

for a pardon in the newspapers and in parliament. (15 Copies)



Suzanne Berne – A crime in the Neighbourhood

When the murdered body of a local boy is found in the woods, suspicions transform

young Marsha's once-secure neighbourhood. Marsha begins to watch her neighbours

and when Mr Green, the shy bachelor from next-door, takes an interest in her mother,

Marsha is drawn into a cruel chain of events. (15 copies)



Melvin Bragg – The Soldier’s Return

The end of World War Two has to be one of Britain's most dewy-eyed, rose-tinted

memories. Yearned for years in advance--Dame Vera Lynn built an entire career on

such yearning--it spelled the end of the anguishing waiting, the terrible deprivations

overseas and Johnny asleep in his own little bed again. It takes a good novel to make

new all the hackneyed emotion of the moment, and a great one to reveal, without

sensationalising, the doubts behind the smiles. In that case, this may be a great novel.

(15 copies)



Poppy Z Brite – Exquisite Corpse

A convicted serial killer leaves his prison cell a dead man and rises again to build a new

2

life. His journey takes him to New Orleans' French Quarter- to the decadent bars and

frivolous boys that haunt the luscious dark corners of a town brought up on Voodoo and

the dark arts. Anticipating a willing victim he finds an equal, something he never

expected even in his wildest dreams... Two men thrown together share a dangerous

desire and a love that brings fear along with lust, and leaves a trail of blood from

London to the USA. (12 copies)



William Brodrick – The Sixth Lamentation

What should you do if the world has turned against you? When Father Anselm is asked

this question by an old man at Larkwood Priory, his response, to claim sanctuary, is to

have greater resonance than he could ever have imagined. For that evening the old

man returns, demanding the protection of the church. His name is Eduard Schwermann

and he is wanted by the police as a suspected war criminal. With her life running out,

Agnes Aubret feels it is time to unburden to her granddaughter Lucy the secrets she has

been carrying for so long. Fifty years earlier, Agnes had been living in Occupied Paris, a

member of a small group risking their lives to smuggle Jewish children to safety - until

they were exposed by a young SS Officer: Eduard Schwermann. As Anselm attempts to

uncover Schwermann's past, and as Lucy's search into her grandmother's history

continues, their investigations dovetail to reveal a remarkable story. (9 copies)



Anne Bronte – Agnes Grey

"Agnes Grey" (1847) draws largely upon the author's unhappy experiences as a

governess. It is the story of a rector's daughter who takes service as a governess and is

ill-treated and lonely. She experiences kindness from no one but the curate, Mr Weston,

whom she finally marries. (10 copies)



Charlotte Bronte - Jane Eyre

Jane survives her tragic childhood through sheer spirit and strength of character. When

she finds work as a governess in a mysterious mansion, it seems she has finally met

her match in the darkly fascinating Mr Rochester. But Thornfield Hall contains a

shameful secret - one that could keep Jane and Rochester apart for ever. Can she

choose between what is right, and her one chance of happiness? (10 Copies)



Geraldine Brooks – March

1861, the first year of the American Civil War. March leaves his beloved wife and

daughters to fight for the North. Alone in a country ripped apart by violence and hatred,

he sees things that shake his very soul. He also encounters the woman who changed

his life nearly twenty years earlier – Grace. She is beautiful, educated, and a slave.

(10 copies)



Dan Brown – The Da Vinci Code

Robert Langdon, Harvard Professor of symbology, receives an urgent late-night call

while in Paris: the curator of the Louvre has been murdered. Alongside the body is a

series of baffling ciphers. Langdon and a gifted French cryptologist, Sophie Neveu, are

stunned to find a trail that leads to the works of Da Vinci - and further. The curator, part

of a secret society named the Priory of Sion, may have sacrificed his life to keep secret

the location of a vastly important religious relic hidden for centuries. It appears that the

clandestine Vatican-sanctioned Catholic sect Opus Dei has now made its move. Unless

Landon and Neveu can decipher the labyrinthine code and quickly assemble the pieces

of the puzzle, the Priory's secret - and a stunning historical truth - will be lost forever.

(10 Copies)



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Charles Bukowski - Post Office

Semi-autobiographical account of a writer struggling to get published, paying his way by

working in menial jobs and spending his money on drink and the horses. (10 Copies)



Robert Olen Butler – Tabloid Dreams

This collection of short stories is hilarious. The author has taken tabloid headlines and

written his own imaginary accounts of the stories behind the headlines. And they say

that truth is stranger than fiction!! (11 copies)



Anthony Capella – Food of Love

Laura Patterson is an American exchange student in Rome who, fed up with being

inexpertly groped by her young Italian beaus, decides there's only one sure-fire way to

find a sensual man: date a chef. Then she meets Tomasso, who's handsome, young -

and cooks in the exclusive Templi restaurant. Perfect. Except, unbeknownst to Laura,

Tomasso is in fact only a waiter at Templi - it's his shy friend Bruno who is the chef. But

Tomasso is the one who knows how to get the girls, and when Laura comes to dinner

he persuades Bruno to help him with the charade. A delicious tale of Cyrano de

Bergerac-style culinary seduction, but with sensual recipes instead of love poems. (10

copies)



Justin Cartwright – The Promise of Happiness

Charles Judd meanders round his local Cornish beach, contemplating the turns his life

has taken. His wife Daphne struggles hopelessly with the latest fish recipe, trying to

keep something in her life under control. Two of their children are keeping it all together

- just. But they are all still recovering from the shock of the prodigal daughter, Juliet,

being imprisoned in New York State for her part in an art theft. Since then, Charles

appears to have lost his entire family. Now Juliet is being released, the family is about to

be reunited and the wounds her imprisonment has caused are being re-opened. (10

copies)



Michael Chabon – The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay

One night in 1939, Josef Kavalier shuffles into his cousin Sam Clay's cramped New

York bedroom, his arduous and nerve-wracking escape from Prague finally achieved -

with the help of his mentor, the master illusionist Kornblum. But little does he realise that

this uneasy first meeting is the start of an extraordinary friendship and even more fruitful

business partnership. For Sam, Joe's formidable artistic skills are a chance to liberate

them both from lives as inventory clerks at the Empire Novelties Incorporated Company.

Together, they create a comic strip called The Escapist, its superhero a Nazi-busting

saviour who liberates the oppressed around the world with his Golden Key. The

Escapist makes them their fortune and their name, but, as the situation worsens in

Europe, Joe can only think of one thing. How can he effect a real-life escape, and free

his family from the tyranny of Hitler? (10 copies)



Mavis Cheek – Sleeping Beauties

A morality tale by the author of "Janice Gentle Gets Sexy" and "Aunt Margaret's Lover".

The women who cross the portals of Tabitha's Beauty Parlour enter a perfumed world

where never a harsh note is struck. Tabitha is benign - but her prospective successor,

Chloe, is of a newer persuasion. (9 copies)



Tracy Chevalier – Falling Angels

"Sex and death meet again in Tracy Chevalier's marvellous evocation of Edwardian

England...."

4

In Falling Angels, Tracy Chevalier has combined a moving elegy to the lost innocence

of the 21st century's grandmothers and great-grandmothers with a reminder of the

strength and modernity of their aspirations and achievements. (12 copies)



Wilkie Collins- Woman in White

Late one night, a drawing teacher meets a mysterious woman dressed in white. Who is

she, and what is her connection to the teacher's new pupil, a beautiful heiress? The

narrative, related in succession by Walter Hartright and other characters in the story,

starts with his midnight encounter on a lonely road with a mysterious and agitated

woman dressed entirely in white, whom he helps to escape from pursuers.

(12 copies)



Fred D’Aguiar – The Longest Memory

The tragic story of a rebellious, fiercely intelligent young slave who breaks all the rules:

in learning to read and write; in falling in love with a white girl, the daughter of his owner,

and finally in trying to escape and joining her in the free North. (11 copies)





Isla Dewar – Keeping up with Magda

A novel set in a fishing village on the Scottish coast, where everyone knows everybody

else's business and gossip abounds. The centre of this world is a cafe and the larger-

than-life woman who runs it, but when newly-widowed Jessie Tate, who seeks peace

and solitude, rents a room upstairs she discovers that it is just the place to lay her

ghosts. (10 copies)





Charles Dickens- David Copperfield

In this novel, Dickens describes one boy growing up in a world which is by turns

magical, fearful and grimly realistic. In a book which is part autobiographical, the

novelist transmutes his life-experience into a series of comic and sentimental

adventures.

(12 copies)



Michael Dibdin – Dead Lagoon

An Aurelio Zen mystery. Zen returns to his native Venice to investigate the

disappearance of a wealthy American resident, but soon learns that, amid the hazy light

and shifting waters of the lagoon, nothing is what it seems. (10 copies)



Helen Dunmore – Your blue-eyed boy.

Simone is a woman who is struggling to deal with a difficult present - a move to the

country, a new job as a district judge, a husband on the brink of a breakdown and

already bankrupt, two small boys and a precarious domestic life, She also has a past

that will soon catch up with her. (15 copies)



Jonathan Falla – Blue Poppies

It is 1950. In a remote Tibetan village, on the border with China, Puton, a young woman,

crippled and widowed in a terrifying attack, and now seen as an omen of bad luck by the

villagers, meets a stranger - a young Scot, Jamie. He is in the village to set up a radio

post. Both are lonely and isolated. Puton is scared of the locals and the Chinese; Jamie

is homesick. As their attraction for each other grows, Communist China invades Tibet.

The villagers must flee to safety, and led by Jamie, and his friend, Nima, a Buddhist



5

monk and herbalist, the caravan tries to dodge the army, led by a vengeful Chinese

commander. (10 copies)



Fannie Flagg – Fried green tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Café

As eighty year old Mrs Cleo Threadgoode tells Evelyn Couch about her life, she

escapes the Rose Terrace Nursing Home and returns in her mind to Whistle Stop,

Alabama in the thirties where the Whistle Stop Café provides good barbecue, good

coffee, love and even an occasional murder. (10 copies)



Susan Fletcher – Eve Green

Following the loss of her mother, eight-year-old Evie is sent to a new life in rural Wales -

- a dripping place, where flowers appear mysteriously on doorsteps and people look at

her twice. With a sense of being lied to she sets out to discover her family's dark secret

-- unaware that there is yet more darkness to come with the sinister disappearance of

local girl Rosemary Hughes. Now many years later Eve Green is waiting for the birth of

her own child, and when she revisits her past something clicks in her mind and her own

reckless role in the hunt for Rosie's abductor is revealed...A truly beautiful and hypnotic

first novel, this is both an engaging puzzle and an enchanting work of literature. (10

copies)



Karen Joy Fowler – The Jane Austen Book Club

Six people five women and a man meet once a month in California's Central Valley to

discuss Jane Austen's novels. They are ordinary people, neither happy nor unhappy,

but each of them is wounded in different ways, they are all mixed up about their lives

and relationships. Over the six months they meet, marriages are tested, affairs begin,

unsuitable arrangements become suitable under the guiding eye of Jane Austen a

couple of them even fall in love. (10 copies)



Elizabeth Gaskell- Ruth

A young orphan, Ruth Hilton, is seduced and then abandoned by the wealthy Henry

Bellingham. She is left to bring up her child in a society that offers her no protection and

seems to punish such innocence. Taken in by a Dissenting minister in the guise of a

widow, she is given a chance to bring up her son whom she loves above all else. But

the condemnation of society always threatens, and despite Ruth's rejection of his

belated offer of marriage, Bellingham's reappearance precipitates her exposure and

rejection. Only her heroic self-sacrifice in the midst of a cholera epidemic regains her

her position, but too late. This was a crusading novel when it was published in 1853,

and aroused almost as much censure for its shocking scenes as it did sympathy for the

heroine. (12 copies)



Mike Gayle – My Legendary Girlfriend

A weekend in the life of struggling teacher Will Kelly, still in love with The One and

desperately searching for An-Other One, and his discovery that with a phone call friends

can lift you from the depths of depression or muck up your entire weekend. (10 copies)



Arthur Golden – Memoirs of a Geisha

Summoning up more than 20 years of Japan's most dramatic history, the geisha's story

uncovers a hidden world of eroticism and enchantment, exploitation and degradation. It

moves from a small fishing village in 1929 to the glamorous and decadent Kyoto of the

30s and on to postwar New York. (16 copies)



Ivan Goncharov – Oblomov

6

The best-known work by the 19th century Russian novelist about a man who lacks

willpower and self-confidence.

On its publication in 1859, Oblomov made Goncharov famous throughout Russia and

ensured for him a prominent position among contemporary Russian novelists. As a boy,

Goncharov was deeply struck by the carefree and idle lives of many of the nobility in his

native town, and in his reminiscences he commented that he created Oblomov from

both his personal observations and self-analysis. (9 copies)



Kate Grenville – Idea of Pefection

Orange Prize winner 2001. The Idea of Perfection is a funny and touching romance

between 2 people who’ve given up on love. Set in the little backwater of Karakarook,

New South Wales, pop. 1,374, it tells the story of Douglas Cheeseman, a gawky

engineer with jug-handle ears, and Harley Savage, a woman altogether too big and too

abrupt for comfort. (12 copies)



Abdulrazak Gurnah – By the Sea

By the Sea tells of an elderly man coming to Britain from Zanzibar, off the coast of

Tanzania, as an asylum seeker. Rajab Shaaban-the name on his passport-does not

explain to the British immigration authorities why he needs asylum, expecting only to be

accepted, as the government of Zanzibar has been officially designated "as dangerous

to its own citizens". The picture Gurnah paints of the asylum-seeker's lot in late 20th-

century Britain is not a favourable one. Shaaban comes to Britain claiming he cannot

speak English, yet understands all that is said to him. Through this deception he meets,

after 30 years, the son of his namesake; Latif Mahmud has settled in Britain and is

presented as an academic expert who will speak Rajab's language. We also receive

glimpses of the torture and imprisonment of Shaaban in his own country, where men

abuse their power after independence from colonialism. However, this unfair treatment

is marginalised by the deception, bitterness and revenge that reverberates between the

two families of Gurnah's story. (10 copies)



Mark Haddon – The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night time

The title the curious incident of the dog in the night-time is an appropriate one for Mark

Haddon's ingenious novel both because of its reference to that most obsessive and fact-

obsessed of detectives, Sherlock Holmes, and because its lower-case letters indicate

something important about its narrator.

Christopher is an intelligent youth who lives in the functional hinterland of autism--every

day is an investigation for him because of all the aspects of human life that he does not

quite get. When the dog next door is killed with a garden fork, Christopher becomes

quietly persistent in his desire to find out what has happened and tugs away at the world

around him until a lot of secrets unravel messily. (10 copies)



George Hagen – The Laments

When Howard and Julia Lament adopt Will, a baby secretly switched at birth in a bizarre

hospital debacle, it marks the beginning of a journey that takes them from Northern

Rhodesia in the 1950s to the Persian Gulf, England and suburban, Seventies America,

as they search for their place in the world. Howard is an engineer and dreamer,

obsessed by the conveyance of liquids through valves. Julia is a woman of fiery spirit

and an artist, who is constantly called upon to reinvent her family's life and her own.

Forced by his younger, anarchic twin brothers to question his place in the family, Will

struggles to find a sense of his own identity through the characters he meets en route -

from Ruth, his first love in Africa, who carries around a biscuit tin lid to admire her

7

reflection to Dawn Snedecker, the lisping intellectual who breaks his heart in America -

and fights to keep his family from breaking apart. (10 copies)



Sarah Hall – The Electric Michelangelo

Opening on the windswept front of Morecambe Bay, on the remote north-west coast of

England, The Electric Michelangelo is a novel of love, loss and the art of tattooing.

Hugely atmospheric, exotic and familiar, it is an exquisitely rendered portrait of seaside

resorts on opposite sides of the Atlantic by one of the most uniquely talented novelists

of her generation. (10 copies)







Jules Hardy – Altered Land

The story of this book concerns the relationship between a mother and her son, but the

theme is selfless love in its widest sense, its beauty and its power to overcome pain.

(10 copies)



Joanne Harris – Chocolat

Chocolat begins with Vianne Rocher and her six-year-old daughter Anouk arriving in the

small village of Lansquenet-sous-Tannes. Three days later, Vianne opens a luxuriant

chocolate shop crammed with the most tempting of confections and offering a mouth-

watering variety of hot chocolate drinks. It's Lent, the shop is opposite the church, it's

open on Sundays and Francis Reynaud, the austere parish priest, is livid.

One by one the locals succumb to Vianne's concoctions. However, certain villagers--

including Armande's snobby daughter and Joséphine's violent husband--side with

Reynaud. So when Vianne announces a Grand Festival of Chocolate commencing

Easter Sunday, it's all-out war. War between church and chocolate, between good and

evil, between love and dogma. (10 copies)



Joseph Heller - Catch 22

At the heart of Joseph Heller's bestselling novel, first published in 1961, is a satirical

indictment of military madness and stupidity, and the desire of the ordinary man to

survive it. It is the tale of the dangerously sane Captain Yossarian, who spends his time

in Italy plotting to survive. (12 copies)



Ernest Hemingway – The Old man and the Sea

The story of an old man's tragic fishing-trip, following the original publication of which

Hemingway was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1954. (10 copies)



Victoria Hislop – The Island

On the brink of a life-changing decision, Alexis Fielding longs to find out about her

mother's past. But Sofia has never spoken of it. All she admits to is growing up in a

small Cretan village before moving to London. When Alexis decides to visit Crete,

however, Sofia gives her daughter a letter to take to an old friend, and promises that

through her she will learn more. Arriving in Plaka, Alexis is astonished to see that it lies

a stone's throw from the tiny, deserted island of Spinalonga - Greece's former leper

colony. Then she finds Fortini, and at last hears the story that Sofia has buried all her

life: the tale of her great-grandmother Eleni and her daughters and a family rent by

tragedy, war and passion. She discovers how intimately she is connected with the

island, and how secrecy holds them all in its powerful grip. (10 copies)



Khaled Hosseini – The Kite Runner

8

Twelve-year-old Amir is desperate to gain the approval of his father and resolves to win

the local kite-fighting tournament, helped by his loyal friend Hassan. But this is 1970’s

Afghanistan and Hassan is a low-caste servant who is jeered at in the street. Neither of

the boys could foresee what would happen to Hassan on the afternoon of the

tournament, which would shatter their lives. After the Russians invade and the family is

forced to flee to America, Amir realises that one day he must return, to find the one

thing that his new life cannot grant him: redemption. (15 copies)



Kazuo Ishiguro – Never Let me Go

A group of students grow up in a darkly skewed version of contemporary England.

Kathy, now thirty-one, struggles to come to terms with her childhood at the seemingly

idyllic Hailsham School, and with the fate that has always awaited her and her closest

friends in the wider world. (10 Copies)



Jerome k Jerome – Three Men in a Boat

Martyrs to hypochondria and general seediness, J. and his friends George and Harris

decide that a jaunt up the Thames would suit them to a ‘T'. But when they set off, they

can hardly predict the troubles that lie ahead with tow-ropes, unreliable weather-

forecasts and tins of pineapple chunks not to mention the devastation left in the wake of

J.'s small fox-terrier Montmorency. Three Men in a Boat was an instant success when it

appeared in 1889, and, with its benign escapism, authorial discursions and wonderful

evocation of the late-Victorian clerking classes', it hilariously captured the spirit of its

age. (15 copies)



Ha Jin – Waiting

This novel tells the story of Lin Kong, a man living in two worlds, struggling with the

conflicting claims of two utterly different women, as he moves through the political

minefields of a society designed to regulate his every move. (13 copies)



Sebastien Japrisot – A Very Long Engagement

One night in 1917, five French soldiers, court-martialled for self-inflicted wounds, are

pushed into No-man's-land and later found dead. The youngest of the five has a

fiancée, Mathilda. This is the story of Mathilda's quest, after the war, to discover what

has become of her fiancé. (12 copies)



Douglas Kennedy-The Pursuit of Happiness

Manhattan, Thanksgiving Eve 1945. War is over and Eric Smythe's party is swinging.

Everyone is there, including his sister Sara. Then in walks the gatecrasher - Jack

Malone, an army journalist fresh from a defeated Germany. This chance meeting

between Sara and Jack will have profound consequences.

(12 copies)



Barbara Kingsolver – The Poisonwood Bible

This is a story told by the wife and four daughters of Nathan Price, a fierce evangelical

Baptist who takes his family and mission to the Belgian Congo in 1959. (10 copies)



Barbara Kingsolver – Prodigal Summer

From an isolated mountain cabin, Deanna Wolfe, a reclusive wildlife biologist, is caught

off-guard by a young hunter who changes utterly her self-assured, solitary life. Lusa

Maluf Landowski finds herself unexpectedly marooned on her husband's farm where

she must declare or lose her attachment to the land. Garnett Walker and Nannie

Rawley, a pair of elderly, feuding neighbours, tend their respective farms and wrangle

9

about God, pesticides, and the possibilities of a future neither of them expected. Over

the course of one humid summer in the Appalachian mountains these characters

discover their connections to one another and to the flora and fauna with which they

share their place in the world. (10 copies).



John Lanchester- Fragrant Harbour

This is the story of four people whose intertwined lives span 70 years in Asia. The

complacency of colonial life in the 1930s; the horrors of the Japanese occupation during

World War II; and the post-war boom and transformation of Hong Kong all surface in

this epic novel.

(12 copies)



Janet Laurence – The Mermaid’s Feast

What could possibly spoil a cruise around Scandinavia? Darina Lisle is about to find out

when the ship's purser disappears over board - and rumours abound that he was

murdered... When Darina Lisle was offered a free cruise on the Empress of India it was

hard to decide what was the most exciting. The two weeks on a luxury liner? The

opportunity to advise the cruise company on their menus? Or the promise of the

uninterrupted company of her husband Detective William Pigram?(12 copies)



Harper Lee – To Kill A Mockingbird

'Shoot all the Bluejays you want, if you can hit 'em, but remember it's a sin to kill a

Mockingbird.' A lawyer's advice to his children as he defends the real mockingbird of

Harper Lee's classic novel - a black man charged with the rape of a white girl. Through

the young eyes of Scout and Jem Finch, Harper Lee explores with exuberant humour

the irrationality of adult attitudes to race and class in the Deep South of the thirties. The

conscience of a town steeped in prejudice, violence and hypocrisy is pricked by the

stamina of one man's struggle for justice. But the weight of history will only tolerate so

much. (10 copies)



Andrea Levy – Small Island

In this delicately wrought and profoundly moving novel, Andrea Levy handles the

weighty themes of empire, prejudice, war and love, with a lightness of touch and a

generosity of spirit that challenges and uplifts the reader. Winner of the 2004 Orange

Prize for Fiction and the 2005 Whitbread Prize. (10 copies)



Marina Lewycka – A Short History of Tractors in Ukranian



For years, Nadezhda and Vera, two Ukrainian sisters, raised in England by their refugee

parents, have had as little as possible to do with each other - and they have their

reasons. But now they find they'd better learn how to get along, because since their

mother's death their aging father has been sliding into his second childhood, and an

alarming new woman has just entered his life. Valentina, a bosomy young synthetic

blonde from the Ukraine, seems to think their father is much richer than he is, and she is

keen that he leave this world with as little money to his name as possible. If Nadazhda

and Vera don't stop her, no one will. But separating their addled and annoyingly

lecherous dad from his new love will prove to be no easy feat - Valentina is a ruthless

pro and the two sisters swiftly realize that they are mere amateurs when it comes to

ruthlessness. As Hurricane Valentina turns the family house upside down, old secrets

come falling out, including the most deeply buried one of them all, from the War, the one

that explains much about why Nadazhda and Vera are so different. In the meantime,



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oblivious to it all, their father carries on with the great work of his dotage, a grand history

of the tractor. (10 copies)





Penelope Lively-The Photograph

Searching through a little-used cupboard at home, Glyn Peters chances upon a

photograph he has never seen before. It shows his wife holding hands with another

man. As Glyn begins to search for answers, he, and those around him, find the

certainties of the past and present slip away. (12 copies)



Ian McEwan – Atonement

We meet 13-year-old Briony Tallis in the summer of 1935, as she attempts to stage a

production of her new drama The Trials of Arabella to welcome home her elder, idolised

brother Leon. But she soon discovers that her cousins, the glamorous Lola and the twin

boys Jackson and Pierrot, aren't up to the task, and directorial ambitions are abandoned

as more interesting preoccupations come onto the scene. The charlady's son Robbie

Turner appears to be forcing Briony's sister Cecilia to strip in the Fountain and sends

her obscene letters; Leon has brought home a dim chocolate magnate keen for a war to

promote his new "Army Amo" bar; and upstairs Briony's migraine-stricken mother Emily

keeps tabs on the house from her bed. Soon, secrets emerge that change the lives of

everyone present... (12 copies)



Jon McGregor – If Nobody Speaks of Remarkable Things

On a street in a town in the North of England, ordinary people are going through the

motions of their everyday existence - street cricket, barbecues, painting windows...A

young man is in love with a neighbour who does not even know his name. An old couple

make their way up to the nearby bus stop. But then a terrible event shatters the quiet of

the early summer evening. That this remarkable and horrific event is only poignant to

those who saw it, not even meriting a mention on the local news, means that those who

witness it will be altered for ever. (10 copies)



Yann Martel – Life of Pi

Some books defy categorisation: Life of Pi, the second novel from Canadian writer Yann

Martel, is a case in point: just about the only thing you can say for certain about it is that

it is fiercely and admirably unique. The plot, if that’s the right word, concerns the

oceanic wanderings of a lost boy, the young and eager Piscine Patel of the title (Pi).

After a colourful and loving upbringing in gorgeously hued India, the Muslim-Christian-

animistic Pi sets off for a fresh start in Canada. His blissful voyage is rudely interrupted

when his boat is scuppered halfway across the Pacific, and he is forced to rough it in a

lifeboat with a hyena, a monkey, a whinging zebra and a tiger called Richard.

(14 copies)



Anchee Min - Empress Orchid

Seventeen-year-old Orchid competes to be one of the Emperor’s wives and is chosen

as a lower-ranking concubine. Orchid bribes her way into the royal bed, and seduces

the monarch, drawing the attention of dangerous foes. Little does she know that China

will collapse around her, and that she will be its last Empress. (10 copies)



David Mitchell – Cloud Atlas

A reluctant voyager crossing the Pacific in 1850; a disinherited composer blagging a

precarious livelihood in between-the-wars Belgium; a high-minded journalist in Governor

Reagan's California; a vanity publisher fleeing his gangland creditors; a genetically

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modified 'dinery server' on death-row; and Zachry, a young Pacific Islander witnessing

the nightfall of science and civilisation - the narrators of Cloud Atlas hear each other's

echoes down the corridor of history, and their destinies are changed in ways great and

small. In his extraordinary third novel, David Mitchell erases the boundaries of

language, genre and time to offer a meditation on humanity's dangerous will to power,

and where it may lead us. (10 copies)



Deborah Moggach – Tulip Fever

The story of sexual betrayal and human failings in 17th-century Amsterdam, as the

characters move inexorably towards a grand deception and a tragic climax. (10 copies)



Bharati Mukherjee – Leave it to me

A post-modern and blackly comic view of California today. Set in San Francisco, this is

a wild exploration of personal and national guilt and responsibility, played out within the

stranglehold of a violent past. (15 copies)



Iris Murdoch- The Sea, The Sea

First published in 1978, this is the story of Charles Arrowby who, retiring from his

glittering London world in order to abjure magic and become a hermit turns to the sea:

turbulent and leaden, transparent and opaque, magician and mother. But he finds his

solitude is peopled by the drama of his own fantasies and obsessions.

(12 copies)



Preethi Nair – One Hundred Shades of White

Is about a mother who tells a lie to protect her children and that lie comes back years

later to destroy the very people it was meant to protect. Nalini, has a carefree life in

India until her husband sends for her and his two small children to come and join him in

London. Uprooted, he abandons them ruthlessly and leaves them with nothing. In order

to protect the childrens' sense of self worth, Nalini tells them that their father died

heroically in an accident and whole realities are build on this one lie as their fight for

survival begins. (10 copies)



David Nicholls – Starter for Ten

The year is 1985 and Brian has just started his first term at university, armed with the

obligatory CND membership and a complete set of Kate Bush albums. But he also has

a dark secret - a long-held, burning ambition to appear on University Challenge and

now, finally, it seems the dream is about to become reality. He's made the team, they've

successfully completed the qualifying rounds and are limbering up for their first televised

match in January. Surely it's only a matter of time before Brian is shaking hands with

Bamber Gascoigne and holding aloft the silver-plated commemorative plaque? But

Brian has a whole lot of living to do before then and when he falls in love with his team-

mate, the off-puttingly posh Alice, he finds there's more than a spanner in the works...

(10 copies)



Audrey Niffenegger – The Time Traveller’s Wife

This extraordinary, magical novel is the story of Clare and Henry who have known each

other since Clare was six and Henry was thirty-six, and were married when Clare was

twenty-two and Henry thirty. Impossible but true, because Henry is one of the first

people diagnosed with Chrono-Displacement Disorder: periodically his genetic clock

resets and he finds himself pulled suddenly into his past or future. His disappearances

are spontaneous and his experiences are alternately harrowing and amusing. The Time

Traveler's Wife depicts the effects of time travel on Henry and Clare's passionate love

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for each other with grace and humour. Their struggle to lead normal lives in the face of

a force they can neither prevent nor control is intensely moving and entirely

unforgettable. (10 copies)



Elizabeth Noble – The Tenko Club

The Tenko Club is made up of four women, Freddie the tall straight shooting American,

Tamsin the English student and born to be mother, Reagan a moody intelligent career

women and Sarah the beauty who makes men swoon. The girls met at Oxford

University in the 80's and over girly chats and late nights formed the Tenko Club,

vowing to always be there for each other. Twenty years later their lives have all taken

very different paths but as promised they are still firm friends, each other's confidants

and rescuers. Freddie's life is thrown into chaos when her husband tells her he's having

an affair, on the same day she hears her estranged father has died suddenly, shaken

and confused she turns to Tamsin and so begins a trip to the States that changes

everything. (10 copies)



Jeff Noon – Automated Alice

This is a reworking of Lewis Carroll's "Alice in Wonderland" which sees Alice

transported in time from the Victorian ages to 1998 - automated age inhabited by weird

and wonderful characters including "civil serpents" and "policedogmen". (10 copies)





George Orwell – Nineteen Eighty-Four

Winston Smith secretly rebels against the totalitarian world he lives in, which demands

total obedience and controls him through the all-seeing telescreens and the watchful

eye of Big Brother, symbolic head of the Party. In his longing for truth and liberty, Smith

begins an illicit love affair with Julia a fellow-worker in the Ministry of Truth, but soon

discovers the true price of freedom is betrayal. (10 Copies)



Tony Parsons – Man and Boy

Harry Silver has it all. A successful job in TV, a gorgeous wife, a lovely child. And in one

moment of madness, he chucks it all away. This is the story of how he comes to terms

with his life and achieves a degree of self-respect, bringing up his son alone.

(14 copies)



Tim Pears- In the Place of Fallen Leaves

Set in a tiny, steep village near Dartmoor, remote and scarcely touched by the late 20th

century, except for an incursion of hippies, the central situation in this book is a

hallucinatory hot summer, remembered by an adult narrator, Alison. The book switches

through time as Alison remembers.

(12 copies)



Mal Peet - Tamar

A Carnegie award winning story about a woman uncovering the past of her deceased

grandfather; It is a story of resistance against the Nazis in Holland, one of passionate

love, jealousy and tragedy set against the daily fear and casual horror of WW2.

Unravelling the tale will transform Tamar’s life. (10 Copies)



Jodi Picoult – My Sister’s Keeper

Anna is not sick, but she might as well be. By age thirteen, she has undergone

countless surgeries, transfusions, and shots so that her older sister, Kate, can somehow

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fight the leukemia that has plagued her since childhood. The product of preimplantation

genetic diagnosis, Anna was conceived as a bone marrow match for Kate -- a life and a

role that she has never challenged...until now. Like most teenagers, Anna is beginning

to question who she truly is. But unlike most teenagers, she has always been defined in

terms of her sister -- and so Anna makes a decision that for most would be unthinkable,

a decision that will tear her family apart and have perhaps fatal consequences for the

sister she loves. (10 copies)



Jodi Picoult – Plain Truth

The discovery of a dead infant in an Amish barn shakes Lancaster County to its core.

But the police investigation leads to a more shocking disclosure: circumstantial

evidence suggests that that eighteen-year-old Katie Fisher, an unmarried Amish woman

believed to be the newborn's mother, took the child's life. When Ellie Hathaway, a

disillusioned big city attorney, comes to Paradise, Pennsylvania, to defend Katie, two

cultures collide - and, for the first time in her high profile career, Ellie faces a system of

justice very different from her own. Delving deep into the world of those who live 'plain',

Ellie must find a way to reach Katie on her terms. As she unravels a tangled murder

case, Ellie also looks deep within - to confront her own fears and desires when a man

from her past comes back into her life. (10 copies)



Rosamunde Pilcher – Winter Solstice

Elfrida Phipps loves her new life in the pretty Hampshire village. But an unforeseen

tragedy upsets Elfrida's tranquillity: Oscar's wife and daughter are killed in a terrible car

crash and he finds himself homeless when his stepchildren claim their dead mother's

inheritance. Oscar and Elfrida take refuge in a rambling house in Scotland which

becomes a magnet for various waifs and strays who converge upon it, including an

unhappy teenage girl. It could be a recipe for disaster. (15 copies)



Annie Proulx- That old ace in the hole

A richly textured story of one man's struggle to make good in the inhospitable ranch

country of the Texas panhandle, told with razor wit and a masterly sense of place. Folks

in the Texas panhandle do not like hog farms. But Bob Dollar, the newly-hired hog site

scout for Global Pork Rind, intends to do his job. Bob must contend with tough men and

women like ancient Freda Beautyrooms who controls a ranch he covets, and Ace

Crouch, the windmiller who defies the hog farms. As Bob settles in at La Von Fronk's

bunkhouse and lends a hand at Cy Frease's Old Dog Cafe, he is forced to question

everything. (12 copies)



Philip Pullman – Northern Lights

In this first part of the "Dark Materials" trilogy, Lyra's friend Roger disappears. She and

her daemon, Pantalaimon, determine to find him. Their quest leads them to the bleak

splendour of the North where a team of scientists are conducting unspeakably horrible

experiments. (12 copies)



Karen Quinn – The Ivy Chronicles

Having lost her high-powered Wall Street job, her husband and her plush Park Avenue

apartment in one afternoon, Ivy Ames emerges broken but unbowed. The newly-single

mother-of-two picks herself up, dusts herself down and reinvents herself as a private

school admissions adviser whose well-heeled clients will do (literally) anything to get

their children into the A-list schools. Thus begins a fast-paced and very funny rom com

as Ivy's bid to support her family and regain her self-esteem becomes a tale of modern-

day reinvention - and unexpected romance. (10 copies)

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Ruth Rendell – Harm Done

Two young girls disappear then return home unharmed some days later. Chief Inspector

Wexford is concerned about a paedophile recently been released into the community

but he cannot foresee the series of serious crimes waiting to happen. (15 copies)



Jean Rhys - Wide Sargasso Sea

This book was inspired by Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre and is set in Jamaica in the

1830’s. A Creole heiress meets a young Englishman who is drawn to her innocent

sensuality and beauty. After their marriage disturbing rumours begin to circulate,

poisoning her husband against her. Caught between his demands and her own

precarious sense of belonging, she is driven towards madness. (10 Copies)



J. D. Salinger – The Catcher in the Rye

Since his debut in 1951 as The Catcher in the Rye, Holden Caulfield has been

synonymous with "cynical adolescent". Holden narrates the story of a couple of days in

his 16-year-old life, just after he's been expelled from prep school, in a slang that

sounds edgy even today and keeps this novel on banned book lists. (15 copies)



Ian Sansom – The Case of the Missing Library

This title introduces Israel Armstrong, one of literature's most unlikely detectives in the

first of a series of novels from the author of the critically acclaimed "Ring Road". Israel is

an intelligent, shy, passionate, sensitive sort of soul: he's Jewish; he's a vegetarian; he

could maybe do with losing a little weight. And he's just arrived in Ireland to take up his

first post as a librarian. But the library's been shut down and Israel ends up stranded on

the North Antrim coast driving an old mobile library. There's nice scenery, but 15,000

fewer books than there should be. Who on earth steals that many books? How? When

would they have time to read them all? And is there anywhere in this godforsaken place

where he can get a proper cappuccino and a decent newspaper? Israel wants

answers... (15 copies)



Jose Saramago – All The Names

Senhor Jose is a minor official in a registry office, with a passion for reconstructing

people's lives from the data in archive documents. One woman's file is particularly

intriguing. She is dead, and he decides to trace her life backwards, from death to birth.

But can he bring her back to life? (10 copies)



Bernard Schlink - The Reader

'A tender, horrifying novel that shows blazingly well how the Holocaust should be dealt

with in fiction. A thriller, a love story and a deeply moving examination of a German

conscience' Independent Saturday Magazine (12 copies)



Alice Sebold – The Lovely Bones

On her way home from school on a snowy December day, 14-year-old Susie Salmon is

lured into a cornfield and brutally raped and murdered, the latest victim of a serial killer.

The Lovely Bones, Alice Sebold's haunting and heartbreaking debut novel, unfolds from

heaven, where "life is a perpetual yesterday" and where Susie narrates and keeps

watch over her grieving family and friends, as well as her brazen killer and the sad

detective working on her case. (12 copies)



Ben Sherwood – The life and death of Charlie St Cloud



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Heartwarming and uplifting novel examining love in all its guises. As a boy, Charlie St

Cloud narrowly survived a car crash that killed Sam, his little brother. Years later, still

unable to recover from his loss, Charlie has taken a job tending to the lawns and

monuments in the New England cemetery where Sam is buried. When he meets Tess

Carroll, a captivating, adventurous woman in training for a solo sailing trip around the

globe, they discover a beautiful and uncommon connection that, after a violent storm at

sea, eventually forces them to choose between death and life, past and present, holding

on and letting go. The Death and Life of Charlie St Cloud is a romantic and uplifting

novel about second chances and the liberating power of love. (10 copies)



Carol Shields- Unless

Reta Winters has a loving family, good friends, and growing success as a writer of light

fiction. Then her eldest daughter suddenly withdraws from the world, abandoning

university to sit on a street corner, wearing a sign that reads only 'goodness'. As Reta

seeks the causes of her daughter's retreat, her enquiry turns into an unflinching, often

very funny meditation on society and where we find meaning and hope. Unless is a

dazzling and daring novel from the undisputed master of extraordinary fictions about so-

called 'ordinary' lives.

(12 copies)



Anita Shreve - Sea Glass

The year is 1929 and Honora Beecher and her husband, Sexton, are just settling into a

new marriage and a cottage on the coast of New Hampshire. While Honora fixes up the

derelict house and searches for bits of sea glass on the beach, Sexton risks everything

they own to buy the house they both love. Shaken by forces they scarcely understand,

Honora and Sexton try to build a marriage and home while overwhelmed by passions of

every kind.This is another gripping and unforgettable story of the human heart from one

of the most accomplished novelists of our time. (12 copies)



Anita Shreve – The Pilot’s Wife With five novels to her credit, including the acclaimed

The Weight of Water, Anita Shreve now offers a skilfully crafted exploration of the long

reach of tragedy in The Pilot's Wife. News of Jack Lyons's fatal crash sends his wife into

shock and emotional numbness. (12 copies)



Lionel Shriver – We Need to Talk About Kevin

Two years ago, Eva Khatchadourian's son, Kevin, murdered seven of his fellow high-

school students, a cafeteria worker, and a popular algebra teacher. Because he was

only fifteen at the time of the killings, he received a lenient sentence and is now in a

prison for young offenders in upstate New York. Telling the story of Kevin's upbringing,

Eva addresses herself to her estranged husband through a series of letters. Fearing

that her own shortcomings may have shaped what her son has become, she confesses

to a deep, long-standing ambivalence about both motherhood in general and Kevin in

particular. How much is her fault? Lionel Shriver tells a compelling, absorbing, and

resonant story while framing these horrifying tableaux of teenage carnage as metaphors

for the larger tragedy - the tragedy of a country where everything works, nobody

starves, and anything can be bought but a sense of purpose. (10 copies)



Ali Smith – Hotel World

Shortlisted for the Booker Prize 2001

Ali Smith's innovative, extraordinary new novel checks us into the smooth, plush world

of the Global - but is it really the kind of place you want to spend the rest of your life in?



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Hotel World takes us through a night in the lives of five people. Three are strangers, two

are sisters, one is dead. Through the course of the evening we are drawn into their

different worlds. It's luxurious for some, but a long drop for others. Playful, defiant and

richly inventive ( 10 copies)



Dodie Smith- I capture the Castle

The 1934 journal of seventeen-year-old Cassandra Mortmain reveals her perspective

on six stormy months in the eccentric and poverty-stricken life of her family in a ruined

Suffolk castle, ending with the revelation that Cassandra is deeply in love!

(12 copies)



John Steinbeck – The Grapes of Wrath

Pulitzer prize-winning epic set against the background of Dust Bowl Oklahoma and

Californian migrant life. The Joad family travel west in search of the promised land, but

their story is one of false hopes, thwarted desires and broken dreams. (10 copies)



Patrick Suskind – Perfume

Born in sweaty, fetid eighteenth century Paris, Grenouille is distinctive even in infancy.

He has "the finest nose in Paris and no personal odour". With wit, a Gothic imagination

and considerable originality, Suskind has developed this simple idea into a fantastic tale

of murder and twisted eroticism controlled by a disgusted loathing of humanity ...Clever,

stylish, absorbing and well worth reading. From ‘Literary review’ (10 copies)



Donna Tartt – The Little Friend

The Cleves--Charlotte, Grandma Edith, Great Aunt Adelaide, Aunts Libby and Tat--are

a southern family of noble stock but, by the early 1970s, diminished numbers and

wealth; haunted by the motiveless, unsolved murder of 9-year-old Robin, "their dear

little Robs", a decade earlier. Harriet, Charlotte's youngest child, "neither sweet nor

pretty" like her sister, Allison, but "smart" was a baby when Robin died. Now a

precocious, bookish pre-teen, she is convinced she can unravel the mystery of his

death. Her chief suspects are the Ratliffs, a local clan of speed-dealing ne'er-do-wells,

one of whom, Danny, had been in Robin's class. (10 copies)



Andrew Taylor – The American Boy

Interweaving real and fictional elements, The American Boy is a major new literary

historical crime novel in the tradition of An Instance of the Fingerpost and Possession.

England 1819: Thomas Shield, a new master at a school just outside London, is tutor to

a young American boy and the boy's sensitive best friend, Charles Frant. Drawn to

Frant's beautiful, unhappy mother, Thomas becomes caught up in her family's twisted

intrigues. Then a brutal crime is committed, with consequences that threaten to destroy

Thomas and all that he has come to hold dear. Despite his efforts, Shield is caught up in

a deadly tangle of sex, money, murder and lies -- a tangle that grips him tighter even as

he tries to escape from it. And what of the strange American child, at the heart of these

macabre events, yet mysterious -- what is the secret of the boy named Edgar Allen

Poe? (10 copies)



Hunter S Thompson – Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas

Stylish reissue of a classic first published in the 1970s: Hunter S Thompson's ether-

fuelled, savage journey to the heart of the American Dream. 'We were somewhere

around Barstow on the edge of the desert when the drugs began to take hold! And

suddenly there was a terrible roar all around us and the sky was full of what looked like

huge bats, all swooping and screeching and diving around the car, which was going

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about a hundred miles an hour with the top down to Las Vegas!' As knights of old

buckled on armour of supernatural power, so Hunter S. Thompson enters Las Vegas

armed with a veritable arsenal of 'heinous chemicals'. His perilous, drug-enhanced

confrontations with casino operators, bartenders, police officers and assorted

representatives of the Silent Majority have a hallucinatory humour and nightmare terror

never before seen on the printed page. (10 copies)



Barbara Trapido – The Travelling Hornplayer

Bad, mad, flame-haired cellist Stella, adulterous Jonathan and high spirited sisters Ellen

& Lydia Dent find their fates bound together through love, loss and literature in a

dazzling tragi-comedy. (12 copies)



Barbara Trapido – Frankie and Stankie

The story of two girls growing up in South Africa in the 1940s and 1950s, set against a

backdrop of tightening Apartheid laws and Afrikaner Nationalist politics. Written with all

Trapido's customary style and wit, this semi autobiographical novel gives a fascinating

insight into what it was like to grow up in that dark period of South African history. (10

copies)



Adriana Trigiani – Lucia, Lucia

Lucia Sartori is the beautiful twenty-five-year-old daughter of a prosperous Italian grocer

in Greenwich Village. The post-war 50s boom is ripe with opportunities for girls with

ambition, and Lucia becomes apprentice to an up-and-coming designer at a chic

department store on New York's Fifth Avenue. Engaged to her childhood sweetheart,

Lucia is torn when she meets a handsome stranger who promises a life of uptown

luxury that career girls like her only read about in the society pages. Forced to choose

between duty to her family and her own dreams, Lucia finds herself in the midst of a

sizzling scandal in which secrets are revealed, her beloved career is jeopardised, and

the Sartoris' honour is tested. (10 copies)



Anne Tyler – The Amateur Marriage

From the incomparable Anne Tyler, a rich and compelling novel, spanning three

generations, about a mismatched marriage - and its consequences. Michael and

Pauline seemed like the perfect couple - young, good-looking, made for each other. The

moment she walked into his mother's grocery store in Baltimore, he was smitten, and in

the heat of World War II fervour, they marry in haste. From the sound of the cash

register in the old grocery to the counterculture jargon of the sixties, from the miniskirts

to the multilayers of later years, Anne Tyler captures the nuances of everyday life with

telling precision and sly humour. (10 copies)



Salley Vickers- Miss Garnet’s Angel

Julia Garnet is a teacher. Just retired, she is left a legacy which she uses by leaving her

orderly life and going to live - in winter - in an apartment in Venice. Its beauty, its secret

corners and treasures, and its people overwhelm a lifetime of reserve and caution.

Above all she's touched by the all-prevalent spirit of the Angel, Raphael. The ancient

tale of Tobias, who travels to Media unaware he is accompanied by the Archangel

Raphael, unfolds alongside Julia Garnet's contemporary journey. The two stories

interweave with parents and landladies, restorers and priests, American tourists and

ancient travellers abounding. The result is an enormously satisfying journey of the spirit:

and Julia Garnet is a character to treasure.

(12 copies)

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Barbara Vine - The Chimney Sweeper’s Boy

When successful author Gerald Candless dies of a sudden heart attack, his daughter

Sarah embarks on a memoir of him and soon discovers that her perfect father was not

all he appeared to be. That in fact he wasn’t Gerald Candless at all. But then, who was

he? And what terrible secret had driven him to live a lie for all those years? (8 copies)



Edith Wharton-The Age of Innocence

The return of the beautiful Countess Olenska into the rigidly conventional society of

New York sends reverberations throughout the upper reaches of society.

Newland Archer, an eligible young man of the establishment is about to announce his

engagement to May Welland, a pretty ingénue, when May's cousin, Countess Olenska,

is introduced into their circle. The Countess brings with her an aura of European

sophistication and a hint of scandal, having left her husband and claimed her

independence.

Her sorrowful eyes, her tragic worldliness and her air of inapproachability attract the

sensitive Newland and, almost against their will, a passionate bond develops between

them. But Archer's life has no place for passion and, with society on the side of May and

all she stands for, he finds himself drawn into a bitter conflict between love and duty. (10

copies)



Dorothy Whipple- The Priory

Above all, The Priory is a very subtle novel, so subtle that, as with all Dorothy Whipple’s

books, it is very easy to miss what an excellent writer she is.

Gently, deceptively gently, but straightforwardly, it sets the scene and draws the reader

in. We are shown the two Marwood girls, who are nearly grown-up, their father, the

widower Major Marwood, and their aunt. Then, as soon as their lives have been evoked,

we see the Major proposing marriage to a woman much younger than himself; and we

understand how much will have to change.

It is a classic plot (albeit the stepmother is more disinterested than wicked) and the book

has many classic qualities; yet there are no clichés either in situation or outlook, just an

extraordinarily well-written and absorbing novel by the writer who has been called the

twentieth-century Mrs Gaskell. (12 copies)



Virginia Woolf- To the Lighthouse

The most autobiographical of Virginia Woolf's work, "To the Lighthouse" is based on her

own childhood experiences, and while it touches on childhood and children's

perceptions and desires, it also explores adult relationships, marriage and the changing

class structure of its time. This novel is an extraordinarily poignant evocation of a lost

happiness that lives on in the memory. For years now the Ramsays have spent every

summer in their holiday home in Scotland, and they expect these summers will go on

forever.

(12 copies)



Carlos Ruiz Zafon – Shadow of the Wind

Hidden in the heart of the old city of Barcelona is the 'cemetery of lost books', a

labyrinthine library of obscure and forgotten titles that have long gone out of print. To

this library, a man brings his 10-year-old son Daniel one cold morning in 1945. Daniel is

allowed to choose one book from the shelves and pulls out 'La Sombra del Viento' by

Julian Carax. But as he grows up, several people seem inordinately interested in his

find. Then, one night, as he is wandering the old streets once more, Daniel is

approached by a figure who reminds him of a character from La Sombra del Viento, a

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character who turns out to be the devil. A page-turning exploration of obsession in

literature and love, and the places that obsession can lead. (10 copies)









Non – Fiction ------------------------



Bill Bryson – Down Under



‘It was as if I had privately discovered life on another planet, or a parallel universe

where life was at once recognisably similar but entirely different. Insofar as I had

accumulated my expectations of Australia at all . . . I had thought of it as a kind of

alternative southern California, a place of constant sunshine and the cheerful vapidity of

a beach lifestyle, but with a slightly British bent – a sort of Baywatch with cricket . . . ’

Bryson (15 copies)



Bill Bryson – Notes From A Small Island

After nearly two decades in Britain, Bill Bryson took the decision to move Mrs Bryson,

little Jimmy et al. back to the States for a while. But before leaving his much-loved

Yorkshire, Bryson insisted on taking one last trip around old Blighty…(15 copies)







Bill Bryson – A Short History of Nearly Everything

The incomparable Bill Bryson travels through time and space to introduce us to the

world, the universe and everything. (10 copies)



Elizabeth Cader-Cuff – Walks with writers: New literary Walks in Old Berkshire

This book of carefully planned routes takes you to the literary heart of Old

Berkshire.The places they visit offer a unique and enthralling insight into the lives and

work of the major literary figures that once lived in the county. (9 copies)



Jason Elliott – An Unexpected Light: Travels in Afghanistan

Not long out of school, Jason Elliot went to Afghanistan to see what the Russians were

doing, and found himself living in the mountains amongst the mujaheddin. He combines

his own experiences with anecdotes from sufis and Soviet veterans. (10 copies)



Judith Flanders- A circle of sisters

Judith Flanders chronicles the lives and discusses the literary works of the Macdonald

sisters. Each of these extraordinary women were either married to or mothers of an

eminent male figure in the arts or politics: Alice was mother of the poet Rudyard Kipling,

Georgina married Edward Burne-Jones the pre-Raphaelite painter, Agnes married

Edward Poynter, the President of the Royal Academy and Louisa was mother to the

Prime Minister, Stanley Baldwin. The book concentrates on the environment in which

the sisters grew up, their reliance on each other and how, in a time when women's

achievements were limited by men, they were not only part of the guiding force behind

such celebrated males but also created works of poetry and novels themselves. (12



20

copies)



Amanda Foreman – Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire

The story of Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, one of the most flamboyant women of

the 18th century, and her times. Distantly related to the late Princess of Wales, she was,

in turn, a compulsive gambler, political savante and operator, drug addict, adulteress

and darling of the common people. (14 copies)



Alexandra Fuller – Don’t lets go to the dogs tonight

Alexandra Fuller was two in 1971, the year her parents abandoned their life in England

and returned to what was then Rhodesia, and to the beginning of a bloody civil war.

While her father was away for long stretches, fighting for Ian Smith's government, her

mother worked the family farm with a passionate determination fuelled by a ferocious

love for Africa. This is the story of one family's quixotic battle against the ravages of

nature and the pain of bereavement, and of their unbreakable bond with the continent

which defined, shaped, scarred and healed them. (10 copies)



Shelia Hancock – The Two of Us

When John Thaw, star of The Sweeney and Inspector Morse, died from cancer in 2002,

a nation lost one of its finest actors. Sheila Hancock lost a beloved husband. In this

unique double biography she chronicles their lives - personal and professional, together

and apart. Thaw was born in Manchester, the son of a lorry driver. When he arrived at

RADA on a scholarship he felt an outsider. In fact his timing was perfect: it was the

sixties and television was beginning to make its mark. With his roles in Z-Cars and The

Sweeney, fame came quickly. But it was John’s role as Morse that made him an icon. In

1974 John married Sheila Hancock, with whom he shared a working-class background

and a RADA education. Sheila was already the star of the TV series The Rag Trade and

went on to become the first woman artistic director at the RSC. Theirs was a sometimes

turbulent, always passionate relationship, and Sheila describes their love - weathering

overwork and the pressures of celebrity, drink and cancer - with honesty and piercing

intelligence. (10 copies)



Stephen Hawking – A Brief History of Time

The author explores the outer reaches of our knowledge of astrophysics and the nature

of time and the universe, and reviews the great theories of the cosmos, from Galileo

and Newton to Einstein and Poincare. (9 copies)



Giles Milton – Nathaniel’s Nutmeg

In 1616, Nathaniel Courthope arrived on a remote East Indies island on a secret

mission - to persuade the islanders to grant a monopoly to England over their nutmeg, a

fabulously valuable spice in Europe. Despite being overwhelmed by Dutch forces, his

heroism led to the founding of a great city. (12 copies)





Mo Mowlam – Momentum

In this text, Mo Mowlam tells the story of her time in government in her own words. She

writes about the months leading up to the 1997 General Election, Labour's landslide

victory and what had gone on as she underwent treatment for a brain tumour while

working towards that victory. She also tells the inside story of her time as Secretary of

State for Northern Ireland. The characters and chemistry of this time are analysed with

the candour, warmth and humour that are Mo Mowlam's trademarks. After the Good

Friday Agreement, Mo Mowlam was, somewhat controversially, moved to the Cabinet

21

Office. Before the second landslide victory of 2001, she decided to leave Westminster

politics - this text tells readers why, and also tells of her hopes and plans for the future.

(12 copies)



Eric Newby – Departures and Arrivals Eric Newby recounts his life, from his earliest

childhood adventures in darkest Barnes, to an elephant fair in India; from the faded

glamour of days and nights on the Orient Express, to a cave dwelling settlement of opal

miners in Australia where even armed men have disappeared. (10 copies)



Anna Pavord – The Tulip

This gift book tells the story of the tulip, from its origins as a wild flower of the Asian

steppes to the world-wide phenomena it is today. The author traces the cultural

significance of the tulip: how it charts political upheavals, illuminates social behaviour,

mirrors economic booms and busts, and plots the ebb and flow of religious persecution.

(10 copies)



Jeremy Paxman – The English: a portrait of a people

So what are the defining features of "Englishness"? How can a country of football

hooligans have such an astonishingly low murder rate? Does the nation's sense of itself

extend to millions of black, Asian and other immigrant Britons? To answer these crucial

questions, Paxman looks for clues in the English language, literature, luke-warm religion

and "curiously passionless devotion" to cricket. (12 copies)



Byron Rogers – The Last Englishman – The life of J.L. Carr

J.L.Carr was the most English of Englishmen: a man who spent most of his working life

in the middle of Middle England, as headmaster of a Northamptonshire school, an

enthusiastic follower of cricket and a tireless campaigner for the conservation of country

churches. But he was also the author of half a dozen of the quirkiest, most comic novels

in English, a publisher (from his own back-room in Kettering) of some of the most

eccentric, collectable – and smallest – books ever printed, and an enigmatic, elusive

individual. (10 copies)





Dava Sobel – Longitude

At the heart of Dava Sobel’s fascinating brief history of astronomy, navigation and

horology stands the figure of John Harrison, self-taught Yorkshire clockmaker, and his

forty-year obsession with building the perfect timekeeper. (15 copies)



(With thanks to Amazon.co.uk and Bookfind-Online for synopses!)









22



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