![]() ![]() ![]() It soon comes to light that Hattie was engaged in a highly compromising and potentially explosive secret online relationship. When she’s found brutally stabbed to death, the tragedy rips right through the fabric of her small-town community. ![]() But Hattie wants something more, something bigger, and ultimately something that turns out to be exceedingly dangerous. ![]() Hattie Hoffman has spent her whole life playing many parts: the good student, the good daughter, the good girlfriend. "Readers drawn to this compelling psychological thriller because of its shared elements with Gillian Flynn’s Gone Girl (2012) will be pleasantly surprised to discover that Mejia’s confident storytelling pulls those themes into an altogether different exploration of manipulation and identity.” - Booklist (starred review)ġ2 Books Gone Girl Fans Should Have on Their Wish List - BookBub “Fans of Gillian Flynn's Gone Girl will devour this fast-paced story.”- InStyle The Wall Street Journal’s Best New Mysteries ![]()
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![]() She wants to trust Flint but how can she tell who is true in this land of evil?įor Neryn has heard whisper of a mysterious place far away: a place where rebels are amassing to free the land and end the King’s reign.Ī story of courage, hope, danger and love from one of the most compelling fantasy storytellers writing today.Ī new book by Juliet Marillier is always a cause for celebration Kate Forsyth ![]() When an enigmatic stranger saves her life, Neryn and the young man called Flint begin an uneasy journey together. She can rely on no one - not even the elusive Good Folk who challenge and bewilder her with their words. ![]() Fifteen-year-old Neryn has fled her home in the wake of its destruction, and is alone and penniless, hiding her extraordinary magical power. The tyrannical king and his masked Enforcers are scouring the land, burning villages and enslaving the canny. ![]() The first book in the Shadowfell trilogy from the acclaimed author of the Sevenwaters seriesĪn exquisitely written tale of love, fear, faith and difficult choices … Marillier is a consummate craftswoman. ![]() ![]() ![]() Parts of the novel are set in Venice-Winterson had yet to visit the city when she wrote about it, and the depiction was entirely fictional. ![]() The novel also explores themes like passion, constructions of gender and sexuality, and broader themes common to 1980s and 90s British fiction. Though nominally a historical novel, Winterson takes considerable liberties with the depiction of the historical setting and various strategies for interpreting the historical-making the novel historiographic metafiction. Publication and subsequent sales of the novel allowed Winterson to stop working other jobs, and support herself as a full-time writer. The novel won the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize. The novel depicts a young French soldier in the Napoleonic army during 1805 as he takes charge of Napoleon's personal larder. The Passion is a 1987 novel by British novelist Jeanette Winterson. ![]() ![]() ![]() In alternating sections of the novel, these details are developed in a narrative about a 16th-century French farm girl and midwife, Isabelle du Moulin, and her eventual marriage to overbearing tyrant Etienne Tournier. Often left alone, she becomes lonely and isolated, and when she decides it's time to have a baby, she begins dreaming of medieval scenes involving a blue dress. Her architect husband, Rick, has been transferred from California to Toulouse, France, with Ella accompanying him. The primary plot concerns the plight of Ella Turner, an insecure American midwife of French ancestry. ![]() In split-narrative fashion, it follows a transplanted American woman in southwestern France as she connects through dreams with her distant Huguenot ancestors. ![]() Chevalier's clunky first novel, initially published in England in 1997, lacks the graceful literary intimacy of her subsequent runaway hit, Girl with a Pearl Earring. ![]() ![]() The result sets the scene for a whole new generation of readers to study this essay alongside pieces that exhibit the erudition, political commitment, and generous collegial exchange that first nourished it into life. Read in the context of these additional pieces, the "Essay on the Gift" is revealed as a complementary whole, a gesture of both personal and political generosity: his honor for his fallen colleagues his aspiration for modern society's recuperation of the gift as a mode of repair and his own careful, yet critical, reading of his intellectual milieu. ![]() Included alongside the "Essay on the Gift" are Mauss's memorial accounts of the work of colleagues lost during World War I, as well as his scholarly reviews of influential contemporaries such as Franz Boas, James George Frazer, Bronislaw Malinowski, Alfred Radcliffe-Brown, and others. With a critical foreword by Maurice Godelier, this is certain to become the standard English version of this important anthropological work. ![]() ![]() With this new translation, this crucial essay is returned to its original context, published alongside the profound works that framed its first publication in the 1923-24 issue of L'Annee Sociologique. Scan down a list of essential works in any introduction to anthropology course and you are likely to see to see Marcel Mauss's masterpiece, Essay on the Gift. ![]() |