• The Director

    The Director

    An artist’s life, a pact with the devil, a novel about the dangerous illusions of the silver screen.

    G.W. Pabst, one of cinema’s greatest, perhaps the greatest director of his era: when the Nazis seized power he was filming in France, to escape the horrors of the new Germany he flees to Hollywood. But under the blinding California sun, the world-famous director suddenly looks like a nobody. Not even Greta Garbo, who he made famous, can help him. And thus, almost through no fault of his own, he finds himself back in his homeland of Austria, which is now called Ostmark. The returning family is confronted with the barbaric nature of the regime. But Goebbels, the minister of propaganda in Berlin, wants the film genius, he won’t take no for an answer and makes big promises. While Pabst still believes that he will be able to resist these advances, that he will not submit to any dictatorship other than art, he has already taken the first steps into a hopeless entanglement.

    Daniel Kehlmann’s novel about art and power, beauty and barbarism is a triumph.

    The Director shows what literature is capable of.

    5.990 kr.
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  • The Tower

    The Tower

    Once upon a time, there was a tower on a hill, beyond the dark trees, somewhere north. An octagonal tower on two levels: glass upstairs and stone below, beneath a steep slate roof – a folly, it was said. According to locals, a young woman named Annie who fell ill was confined to the tower by her father for three years and died there, alone.

    Fascinated by Annie’s story, Thea Lenarduzzi attempts to piece the past together in a formidable act of imagination, which, tugging at the strings of the how, why and who of stories, begins to unravel the very idea of storytelling itself. Veering between fiction, memoir, fairy tale and folklore, The Tower is an extraordinary book about power, abuse and why we don’t always tell the story we set out to tell.

    4.390 kr.
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  • Hvaðan og hvert / Wherefrom and Whereto

    Hvaðan og hvert / Wherefrom and Whereto

    Þessi bók sýnir málverk Jóhönnu Boga frá margra áratuga tímabili. Auk þess eru að finna hugleiðingar Jóhönnu og annarra um ýmislegt sem tengist list hennar.

    9.990 kr.
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  • A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian
  • Hotel Silence
  • Falling Animals

    Falling Animals

    On an isolated, windswept beach, a pale figure sits serenely against a sand dune staring out to sea. His hands are folded neatly in his lap and there is a faint smile on his otherwise lifeless face. After months of fruitless investigation, the nameless stranger is buried in an unmarked grave, but the mystery of his life and death lingers on, drawing the nearby villagers into its wake. From strandings to shipwrecks, it is not the first time that strangeness has washed up on their shores.

    As a chorus of voices come together to unravel the story of one man, alone on a beach, a crosshatched portrait begins to emerge, threaded by lives both true and imagined, real and surreal, past and present.

    3.490 kr.
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  • Cultural Studies and the Study of Popular Culture
  • Structuralist Poetics: Structuralism, Linguistics and the Study of Literature

    Structuralist Poetics: Structuralism, Linguistics and the Study of Literature

    A work of technical skill as well as outstanding literary merit, Structuralist Poetics was awarded the 1975 James Russell Lowell Prize of the Modern Language Association. It was during the writing of this book that Culler developed his now famous and remarkably complex theory of poetics and narrative, and while never a populariser he nonetheless makes it crystal clear within these pages.

    990 kr.
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  • The Shapeshifter's Daughter

    The Shapeshifter’s Daughter

    Nothing, on earth or below it, freezes faster than the worthless heart.

    Before she was a hideous monster, the queen of the underworld was simply Hel. But cast as a girl out of lofty Asgard, realm of the gods, by Odin the Allfather, Hel’s fate as the terrible goddess of death is sealed. Half beauty, half crone, she has reigned for aeons in the starless darkness of Niflheim, grimly welcoming the most pitiful of death’s travellers to her ice-locked prison. Until one day a memory shifts, and she is forced to seek out the sun in Midgard, where humans have made their home.

    Faced with a terminal cancer diagnosis, Helen Firth makes the impulsive decision to return to Orkney after forty years to make peace with her past. Under the wintering solstice sun, she reconnects with the ungainly but affable Thorfinn Coffin, who helps her address the real reason she has returned to the islands: to die.

    As Helen draws closer to death and ever closer to Thorfinn, Hel in turn is intrigued by Helen. She, too, has a past to confront and a lesson to learn: that perhaps who she believes herself to be isn’t who she really is.

    A powerful reimagining of the Norse myth of Hel, The Shapeshifter’s Daughter celebrates the joy of reclaiming our stories.

    4.690 kr.
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  • The Faber Book of Science

    The Faber Book of Science

    The Faber Book of Science, edited by John Carey, charts the progress of science through its luminaries and heroes, from Leonardo da Vinci to Richard Dawkins, via Charles Darwin, T. H. Huxley, Jean Henri Fabre and many, many others.

    990 kr.
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  • To Ruhleben – And Back

    To Ruhleben – And Back

    Geoffrey Pyke was one of the 20th century’s most brilliant eccentrics-mad genius, financial wizard, impoverished hermit. But in 1914, Pyke was just another Cambridge teenager. He pitched a wild notion to a London newspaper editor: Why not make him their war correspondent in Berlin? The editor called the boy’s bluff, and Pyke made his way across Europe on little more than a false passport, a pretty good German accent, and sheer chutzpah.

    And so begins an odyssey into the heart of wartime Berlin, and a plunge into a harrowing year of solitary confinement and then imprisonment at Ruhleben, an internment camp that is now considered the model for Germany’s concentration camps. After an escape and a perilous dash to the Dutch border, Pyke returned home at the age of twenty to write To Rubleben – And Back.

    Lost to obscurity for over eighty years, his extraordinary book is a college student’s sharp-tongued travelogue, a sober meditation on imprisonment and escape… and, as Pyke intended, a ripping yarn.

    “The war will produce few books of more absorbing interest than this one.” -The New York Times

    “A very fine story of a great and perilous adventure.” -The Times (London)

    2.990 kr.
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  • The Hunger Games: Catching Fire